Dashboard – August 11 – 15, 2014

 

 

 

 

 

Selections

MONDAY:  Another very quiet and abbreviated economic news week and the international front seems a bit quieter. Not a bad combination to begin the week and hopefully continue Friday’s very strong showing

TUESDAY:     Another day where only quiet can really be justified, as news is lacking on all fronts. Today, however, doesn’t have some of the same kind of jump start stimulus as yesterday had, with Kinder Morgan’s news.

WEDNESDAY:  Another day devoid of major news, marred a little by Macys earnings, but still looking to continue the week’s narrow range

THURSDAY:    They’re not shopping at Wal-Mart? They’re not shopping at Macys? Maybe Nordstrom? It can’t all be at Amazon.

FRIDAY:  No real news to end the week, which is on track to become the strongest in nearly 2 months

 



 

                                                                                                                                           

Today's TradesCash-o-Meter

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak PeekPie Chart Distribution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Summary

  

Weekend Update – August 10, 2014

Back in 2007 there was a sign that most mere mortals failed to recognize or understand as they stood in the path of peril.

A messenger delivered such a sign some seven years earlier, as well, and did so again last month.

The messenger was old, perhaps as old as the universe itself and his words and actions did foretell of the dangers that awaited, yet they were not appreciated as such, not even by the messenger, who may also have served as the executioner.

The proposed acquisitions of Chris-Craft and Dow Jones, in 2000 and 2007, respectively, were among the signs of market tops preceding terrible plunges that each saw the sacrifice of a generation of investors, some of whom are still said to be hiding as they await some sign of safety to begin investing once again.

The re-appearance of the messenger should give them some pause before considering a return to the action.

However, in a strange kind of way the “all safe” sign may have been delivered this week, as Rupert Murdoch, whose timing with his large previous acquisitions has been exquisite in its accuracy for coinciding with market tops has now sent a counter sign.

Barely a month ago, for those believing in the power of Murdoch, it was ominous that he would have proposed a buy out of Time Warner (TWX), but this week that offer was revoked, perhaps offering a respite to investors fearing another plunge from what may be destined to be a market top.

While many are speculating as to the reason for Murdoch’s change of heart, could it be that he has come to the realization that his offering price was just too high and that history, which has a habit of repeating itself, was poised to do so again?

Probably not, as once you get the taste, it’s all about the hunt and it shouldn’t come as a surprise if Murdoch either regroups, as the world appreciates that Time Warner’s share value is far less without Murdoch’s pursuit or as he seeks a new target.

As far as the revocation of the offer being a counter sign, this past week didn’t seem to receive it as such, as market weakness from last week continued amidst a barrage of international events.

But Murdoch wasn’t alone this week in perhaps having some remorse. Sprint (S), which never really made an overt bid for T-Mobile (TMUS), did however, overtly withdraw itself from that fray, just as T-Mobile was thumbing its nose at the French telecommunications company, Illiad’s (ILD) bid.

Walgreen (WAG) may have had a double dose of remorse this week as it announced that it would buy the remainder of a British drug store chain but would not be considering doing a tax inversion. They may have first regretted the speculation that they would be doing so as they undoubtedly received considerable political pressure to not move its headquarters. Seeing its shares plunge on that news may have been additional cause for remorse.

While Murdoch may have significant personal wealth tied to the fortunes of his company and may have a very vested interest in those shares prospering, that may not always be the case, as for some, it may be very easy to spend “other people’s money” in pursuit of the target and be immune to feelings of remorse.

But it’s a different story when it’s your own money in question. “Investor’s Remorse” can have applicability in both the micro and macro sense. We have all made a stock purchase that we’ve come to regret. However, in the larger sense, the remorse that may have been felt in 2000 and 2007 as Murdoch flexed his muscles was related to the agony of having remained fully invested in the belief that the market could only go higher.

When we see the potential signs of an apocalypse, such as increasing buyout offers and increasing numbers of initial public offerings while the market is hitting new highs, one has to wonder whether remorse will be the inevitable outcome. An Italian recession and the German stock exchange in correction may add to concerns.

Philosophically, my preference has long been to miss an upward climb to some degree by virtue of not being fully invested, rather than to be fully engaged during a market decline.

A drop of 10% seems like a lot, but it will seem even more when you realize that you must gain 11% just to once again reach your baseline. Having been that route I believe it’s much easier to drop 10% than it is to gain 11%. Just ask anyone who now own stocks that may have suddenly found themselves officially in “correction territory.”

As I get older I have less and less time and less appetite for remorse. I would assume that Rupert Murdoch feels the same, but he may also have a sense of immunity coupled with the secret for immortality, neither of which I enjoy.

As usual, the week’s potential stock selections are classified as being in Traditional, Double Dip Dividend, Momentum or “PEE” categories.

This week’s selections include a number of recent targets and perhaps sources of remorse that may now find themselves better suited for those spending their own money, rather than that of other people.

Time Warner shareholders have been on a rollercoaster ride over the past three weeks as they saw a plunge on the same order as an initial surge in that time span. They may be experiencing some remorse for their leadership not being willing to consider Murdoch’s overture. The revocation of the offer, beautifully timed to dampen the good news of Time Warner’s earnings perhaps helped to limit any upside gains from earnings and adding to the feeling that Murdoch was the key to attaining “fair value,” even if that fair value may now no longer represent a premium to the initial bid.

However, with shares now back to their pre-offer level, which admittedly was at the then high for the year, the option premiums are quite high, reflecting the potential for more action. The challenge is knowing in which direction.

In the case of T-Mobile, it was a whirlwind week seeing an offer from abroad which wasn’t taken very seriously by anyone and then seeing the presumptive acquirer drop out of the game.

It’s hard to say who if anyone would have had any remorse, certainly not its out front CEO, John Legere, but no doubt shareholders experienced some, as shares plummeted in the belief that suitors were dropping like flies.

While Legere talks a boisterous game and did all he could to close the door to any future with Sprint, the reality is that T-Mobile needs both spectrum and cash and Legere needs a “sugar daddy” and one with lots of patience and tolerance.

For anyone willing to get in bed with T-Mobile, the good news is that they can have John Legere. The bad news is that they get John Legere.

But for a short term trade, suddenly T-Mobile is in correction territory and as long as there may still be prospects of capital appreciation, the option premiums are very enticing.

Walgreen shares fell nearly 15% on news that it wasn’t going to do a tax inversion, which seems far more than appropriate, as shares had their major ascent about 6 months ago long before most had ever heard of tax inversion.

I’ve been waiting for a while for Walgreen shares to return to the $60 level and the current reason hardly seems like one that would keep shares trading at that low level. Some recovery over the past two days doesn’t dampen the attraction to its shares.

Target (TGT) certainly should have experienced some remorse over the manner in which its data security practices were managed. In Target’s case, they put an additional price tag on that remorse that reversed the recent climb in shares, but was just really part of the obligatory dumping of all bad news into a single quarter to honor the ascension of a new CEO.

I’ve owned Target shares for a while waiting for it to recover from its security breach related price drop. Uncharacteristically, I haven’t added to my holdings as I usually do when prices drop because I haven’t had the level of confidence that I usually want before doing so. Now, however, I’m ready to take that plunge and don’t believe that there will be reason for further personal remorse. WIth an upcoming dividend, I don’t mind waiting for it to share in an anticipated pick up in the retail sector.

I’ve certainly had remorse over my ownership of shares in Whole Foods (WFM). While its co-CEOs are certainly visionaries, they have been facing increasing competition, are engaged in an aggressive national expansion and have one CEO that tends to make inopportune comments reflecting personal beliefs that frequently impact the stock price.

To his credit John Mackey has expressed some regrets over his choice of words in the past, but recently there has been little to inspire confidence. A recent, albeit small, price climb was attributed to a rumor of an activist position. While I have no idea of whether there’s any validity to that, Whole Foods does represent the kind of asset that may be appealing to an activist, in that it has a well regarded product, significantly depressed share price and leadership that may have lost touch with what is really important.

Mondelez (MDLZ) may or may not have any reason to feel remorse over adding activist investor Nelson Peltz onto its Board of Directors and to his decision to stop seeking a merger deal with Pepsi (PEP). Investors, however, may have some remorse as shares suddenly find themselves in correction over the past month.

That price drop brings Mondelez shares back into consideration for rotation into my portfolio, especially if looking for classically “defensive” positions in advance of an anticipated market decline. With an almost competitive dividend, a decent option premium and the possibility of some price bounce back the shares look attractive once again.

DuPont (DD) and Eli Lilly (LLY) are both ex-dividend this week and there’s rarely reason to feel remorse when a dividend can make you feel so much better, especially when well in excess of the average for S&P 500 stocks. Lilly’s recent fall in the past two weeks and DuPont’s two month’s decline offer some incentive to consider adding shares at this time and adding option premiums to the income mix while waiting for the market to return to an upward bias.

Cree (CREE) reports earnings this week and is always an exciting ride for a lucky or unlucky investor. It is a stock that either creates glee or remorse.

My most recent lot of shares came from eventually taking assignment of shares following the sale of puts after the previous earnings report, thinking that they couldn’t possibly go down any further in a significant manner. I don’t have any remorse, as I’ve been able to generate option premium revenue on having rolled the puts over and then having sold calls subsequent to assignment. I may, however, have some remorse after this coming week’s earnings.

The option market is once again looking for a significant earnings related move next week. For the trader willing to risk remorse a 1% weekly ROI may be achieved at a strike level 12% below the current price. For those less tolerant of risk, if shares do drop significantly after earnings, some consideration can be given to selling out of the money puts and being prepared to manage the position, as may become necessary.

Finally, how can you talk about remorse and not mention Halliburton (HAL)? From drilling disasters to adventures in Iraq Halliburton really hasn’t needed to be remorseful, because somehow it always found a way to prosper and move beyond the “disaster du jour.”

In hindsight, it seems so perfectly appropriate that for a period in time its CEO was future Vice President Dick Cheney, who didn’t even express any remorse for having shot a good friend in the face.

That’s the kind of leadership that we need in a company being considered for its worthiness of our personal assets, because we are capable of remorse and are pained by the prospects of engaging in it.

With some recent price weakness, as being experienced in the energy sector, now appears to be a good time to take advantage of Halliburton’s price retreat and save the remorse for others.

Traditional Stocks: Halliburton, Mondelez, Target, Time Warner, Walgreen, Whole Foods

Momentum: T-Mobile

Double Dip Dividend: DuPont (8/13), Eli Lilly (8/13)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: Cree (8/12 PM)

Remember, these are just guidelines for the coming week. The above selections may become actionable, most often coupling a share purchase with call option sales or the sale of covered put contracts, in adjustment to and consideration of market movements. The overriding objective is to create a healthy income stream for the week with reduction of trading risk.

Week in Review – August 4 – 8, 2014

 

Option to Profit Week in Review
August 4 – 8,  2014
 
NEW POSITIONS/STO NEW STO ROLLOVERS CALLS ASSIGNED/PUTS EXPIRED CALLS EXPIRED/PUTS ASSIGNED CLOSED
4 / 4 3 4 4  / 0 3  / 0 1

    

Weekly Up to Date Performance

August 4 – 8, 2014

< strong>New purchases for the week trailed both the unadjusted and adjusted S&P 500 by 0.4% during another week of market losses, that were erased with Friday’s large gain. New positions actually lost ground for the week, in sharp contrast to the portfolio of existing open positions which again performed very strongly. 

Following a week with lots of extraneous events that shaped the market’s behavior this week wasn’t very different, as there was really no economic news of interest and no market rattling earnings surprises.

New positions opened this week went 0.1% lower while the overall market was 0.3% higher on both an unadjusted and adjusted basis.

Existing positions again significantly out-performed the market for the week by a large 0.8%. That sort of out-performance is larger than you might expect from the impact of option premiums, but there were no real performance standouts for the week, as was seen the previous week when Family Dollar Stores was part of the equation.

Existing positions actually showed an overall gain of 1.1% for the week, as compared to the market gain of 0.3%. 

Performance of closed positions out-performed the S&P 500 performance by 1.8%. They were up 3.7% out-performing the market by 94.5%. 

It seems as if it has been a while since I’ve had anything good to say about the market.

On a positive note it often works out better that way and this was another week where the bottom line showed improvement and out-performed the broader market by a surprisingly large amount, despite not having any real superstar performers.

The disappointment, and you always have to look for those, was that not enough new covered positions were created and not enough positions were rolled over. The surprising strength on Friday helped to ease some of that disappointment, though, with some additional rollovers and even another new covered position created.

The week ended the way it began.

It was a week that began with some surprising promise with Monday showing a nice gain after last Thursday and Friday’s large losses.

But it was all illusory, as the market deteriorated for most of the rest of the week as the “experts” initially disagreed as to whether it was technical factors being the root cause of international events.

The market then staged an improbable rebound as it seemed to respond news that was was already known, regarding the scheduled end to Russian military exercises on the Ukraine border, as if that actually means anything.

Ultimately, though, none of that really matters.

Whether it’s technical, international uncertainty, lots of rollovers, casino weakness in Macao and all of those other things that are happening. None of it really matters, other than the bottom line.

The truth is that I do like the means and not just the ends, but ultimately no one really cares about the path or the factors.

There was so much news last week and so little expected this week, yet once again we were hostage to quite a bit of the external factors that create fear and uncertainty.

How and why Friday was able to escape from that uncertainty will be a m
ystery, at least to me, but a welcome mystery.

Happily, there were some assignments this week and a few rollovers and even a couple of new covered positions created.

That means that next week there is some cash available and after some of the drops of this week there really do appear to be some bargains to be had, even after a day or two of recovery.

That’s always a good combination, but as with some previous weeks I don’t think that I’ll be too excited about aggressively going into the market to add new positions, but at least there’s both the will and the way to do so.



 



 











 

 

 





 

     

This week’s details may be seen in the Weekly Performance spreadsheet * or in the PDF file, as well as as in the summary.below

(Note: Duplicate mention of positions reflects different priced lots):



New Positions Opened:   CY, JPM, LVS, MET

Puts Closed in order to take profits:  none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the next weekly cycleJPM, WFM

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into extended weekly cycle:  CHK (8/29), LVS (8/22)

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the monthly cycle: none

Calls Rolled Over, taking profits, into a future monthly cycle: none

Calls Rolled Up, taking net profits into same cyclenone

New STO:  BX, EBAY, DOW

Put contracts expired: none

Put contract rolled over: none

Long term call contracts sold:  none

Calls Assigned:  EBAY ($52.50), EBAY ($53.50), GPS ($40), GPS ($42)

Calls Expired:   C, CHK, PFE

Puts Assigned:  none

Stock positions Closed to take profits:  LB

Stock positions Closed to take losses: none

Calls Closed to Take Profits: none

Ex-dividend Positions: MET (8/6 $0.25), WLT (8/7 $0.01)

Ex-dividend Positions Next Week:  CLF (8/13 $0.15)

 

 

For the coming week the existing positions have lots that still require the sale of contracts:   AGQ, BX, C, CHK, CLF, COH, DOW, EBAY, FCX, GM, IP, JCP, LULU, MCP, MOS,  NEM, PBR , PFE, RIG, TGT, WFM, WLT (See “Weekly Performance” spreadsheet or PDF file)



* If you don’t have a program to read or modify spreadsheets, you can download the OpenOffice Suite at no cost.



Daily Market Update – August 8, 2014

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – August 8, 2014 (8:30 AM)

The Week in Review will be posted by 6 PM and the Weekend Update will be posted by Noon on Sunday.

Today’s possible outcomes include:

 

Assignments: EBAY (52.50), GPS ($40)

Rollovers: EBAY ($53.50), GPS ($42)

Expirations:  C, CHK, LVS, PFE, WFM

 

Trades, if any, will be attempted to be made prior to 3:30 PM EDT

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – August 7, 2014 (Close)

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – August 7, 2014 (Close)

Following yesterday’s flat trading and flat finish, the morning was awaiting word regarding the ECB’s refinance rate.

With that remaining unchanged, which came as no surprise, the pre-market just continued along the same flat line as it then awaited some word from the ECB president.

In the past he has had a way of moving markets, exactly the same way that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve can move markets, so while the futures were continuing to go no where special after the rate announcement, they could easily have quickly changed direction about 30 minutes later as Draghi began to speak.

The difference has been that when Draghi has spoken his words have largely been the kind that have reassured and rallied markets.

Today he didn’t, nor did he say anything that created any sense of confidence or any sense of anything.

That alone was enough to disappoint those looking for anything to get out of the current state of stupor and passivity.

Even though we’re not even down 4% from the S&P 500’s high levels, as the morning was set to begin, we could use some of that kind of rally, especially heading into the close of the week when it would especially nice to see some likely assignments.

Unfortunately, today wasn’t going to be the day for that. Even though the market started on a positive note once the bell rang, it fairly quickly deteriorated and really had nothing of a positive tone as the day worked toward the close.

Unlike the past few weeks in which trading started fairly slowly and then picked up steam in the final two days resulting in a nice combination of rollovers, new covers and assignments, I just didn’t see a repeat of that pattern in the making for this week and have little reason to expect that Friday will be the day to rescue all.

While flat and down markets are still my favorite environment, it’s a lot better when the rollovers and new covered positions can be established. Even if the stocks are going no where themselves, at least their derivative cousins can do something of value.

So far, this week?

Not so much.

Although there aren’t too many positions set to expire this week, as compared to some recent weeks past, there is still at least some opportunity to see some assigned and some rolled over, as long as the last two days don’t really do anything terribly stupid.

Today didn’t really help in that regard,
although early in the session there was at least some opportunity for one rollover and one newly covered position.

While the past few weeks were able to withstand some weak trading days to end the week and still see those revenue producing trades accomplished, this week doesn’t have very much of a cushion, so it would have be en nice to see just a quiet end to a week of headless wandering and then have the chance to start anew next week.

Instead, today dug the hole a little bit deeper.

However, despite that apparently sounding negativity, and certainly without wanting to jinx anything, as the market does trade in a flat manner or even trading downward, the portfolio path is again trending toward out-performance as compared to the S&P 500 as today’s session was getting ready to start.

Without having crunched the numbers at the close, I’m hoping that’s still the case.

But that kind of out-performance isn’t unusual as the premiums are typically the factor that provides the additional performance,

However, while out-performance is always the goal, it’s nice to also couple that with actual increasing portfolio value, as well.

Hopefully those will both continue for the final day of the week although some opportunity to make the trades would really help and make hope unnecessary.