Dashboard – March 9 – 13, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

SELECTIONS

MONDAY:   A sedate start to the morning seems to be coming after Friday’s very unexpected response to Employment data reflected fear of rising interest rates. Too bad no one referred to the history books to see that the initial phase of interest rate hikes was associated with continuing rises in stocks.

TUESDAY:    Does anyone really believe that this morning’s nealy 200 point sell off in the futures is related to the realization that the strong US Dollar will result in decreased corporate profits? Strap on this morning and watch iot all unfold.

WEDNESDAY:  This morning, the market begins 3.5% below its recent high. If hostry is a guide, there’s more downside ahead. This morning’s modest rise doesn’t do much to inspire confidence to start looking for bargains that could become cheaper in the blink of an eye.

THURSDAY:   While the market is mildly higher in the pre-open futures, we may have to wait until next week’s FOMC to finally get back to rational trading and be free of fear of interest rates

FRIDAY:  Another tumultous kind of week with no plausible catalysts no news to account for much, finally comes to an end. Yesterday’s bounce higher may serve to offer nothing more than mis-direction, although a giant sigh of relief may be released after next week’s FOMC Statement release.

 

 

 


 



 

                                                                                                                                           

Today's TradesCash-o-Meter

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak PeekPie Chart Distribution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Summary

  

Weekend Update – March 8, 2015

It seems as if it has been a long time since we were at that stage where good economic news was interpreted negatively and bad news was celebrated.

Lately, on the economic front there really hasn’t been any bad news, although depending on your perspective perhaps the good news just hasn’t been good enough. That might include unrequited expectations for a consumer buying frenzy that hasn’t yet materialized as a result of energy savings.

On the other hand the good news has been steady. Not terribly spectacular, but a steady climb toward an improved economic landscape for more and more people. Again, to put a little cynical spin on things, for some the climb has been far too slow and the 5.5% unemployment rate a bit illusory as so many may have simply dropped out of the employment seeking pool.

After a week in which the market moved in alternating directions on no news at all during the first 3 days of trading, it finally reverted to a paradoxical form when the Employment Situation Report was released on Friday morning.

A much better than expected number and with no revisions to previous months was great if you were among those looking for and finding a new job. What it wasn’t great for were the prospects of interest rates staying low and the Federal Reserve continuing with its “patience.”

At least that’s how the impact of the data was perceived. The good news was cast in a very negative way and the immediate reaction was not much different from the panic that might beset a grocery store when in August the Farmer’s Almanac may call for unusually brutal winter and people clear the shelves of milk in anticipation.

While there are still far too many people in need of jobs and newly created jobs aren’t necessarily of the same caliber of pay as those lost since 2008, for some the burden of the good news was too much to bear and the selling accelerated to a level not seen in quite a while, although never really to the point of toilet paper frenzy.

At the very least for those who practice a paradoxical approach to the interpretation of news, they were able to contain some of their emotions even as their irrational selling ruled the day. It was like still finding a carton of milk after the hordes had beaten you to the store, indicating that not everyone believed that Armageddon was the next stop.

I think that if I could choose, I’d much rather be trading stocks when there is an identifiable and consistent reaction to events, even if it may be less than rational. The early part of the week, moving up and down daily in individual vacuums could do little to create any kind of confidence regarding market direction. In essence, it’s easier to plan survival tactics when maniacs are in charge than it is when no one is in charge.

Those that were in charge on Friday based their actions on fear and dragged the rest of us down with them.

They were fearful that putting more people to work would accelerate the timetable for raising interest rates. That in turn would lead to greater costs of doing business and would be coming at a time that the rest of the world is lowering rates.

That would probably lead to even greater strength in the US Dollar, perhaps even USD and Euro parity, which only serves to accentuate those currency headwinds that have already been highlighted as reducing corporate earnings and would only further create competitive threats.

Cycles. You can’t live with them and you can’t live without them.

The reaction by traders on Friday would have you believe that none of this was previously known or suspected to be in our future.

The reality is that we all know that rates are going to go higher. It’s just a question of whether we follow Janet Yellen’s perceived path or Stanley Fisher’s accelerated path.

Personally, my fear is how we could be trading in a market that in the space of a single week, when both Yellen and Fischer expressed their opinions, could go from the comforting assurances from Janet Yellen to completely tossing out those assurances. That leads to the question of whether we believe she is simply wrong or just lying.

Neither of those is very comforting.

It’s actually even worse than that, as last week the market, following a positive response to Yellen’s comments turned on her barely 2 days later upon Fischer’s suggestion that interest rate increases would be coming sooner, rather than later.

On the other hand a more rational consideration of Friday’s reaction would suggest that maybe the reaction itself was irrational and unwarranted because Janet Yellen is in a better position to know about the timing or rate increases than a nervous portfolio manager and is probably much less likely to lie or mis-represent her intentions.

There’s always that.

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

Following Friday’s sell-off a number of positions appear to be more appropriately priced, however, the accelerating nature of the sell-off should leave some residual precaution as approaching the coming week, as even stock innocents were taken along for the plunge on Friday and could just as easily still be at risk.

Another large climb in 10 Year Treasury interest rates makes interest related investment strategies more appealing to some and the impending start of the European version of Quantitative Easing may also serve to siphon investment funds from US equity markets.

While I do have some room in my mind and heart for some more exciting kind of positions this week, my primary focus is likely to be on more mundane positions, especially if there’s a dividend at hand. This week’s selection is also more limited, than usual, as I expect my week to be ruled by some of that heightened caution, at least at the outset of trading.

Huntsman (NYSE:HUN), Coca Cola (NYSE:KO) and Merck (NYSE:MRK) seem to be appropriate choices for the coming week and all under-performed the S&P 500 during the past week, with the latter perhaps having more currency related considerations in their futures.

Trading right near its one year low is Huntsman Corp . It’s not a terribly exciting company, but at the moment, who really needs excitement?

Trading only monthly options I might consider the use of a longer term option sale, perhaps a May 2015, to further reduce the excitement, while bypassing earnings in late April and adding a decent sized premium to the potential return, in addition to the upcoming dividend and, hopefully, some capital gains from shares, as well.

There probably isn’t very much that can be said about Coca Cola that would offer any great new insights. With a number of potential support levels beneath its current price and a recently enhanced option premium, particularly in a week that it is ex-dividend, a position seems to offer a good balance of reward with risk.

While the company may still be floundering in its efforts to better diversify its portfolio of offerings and while it may continue to be under attack for its management, those may be of little concern for a very short term strategy seeking to capitalize on option premiums and the upcoming dividend. At its current price level, however, it is below its mid-point level range for the past 6 months and may offer some near term upside in the underlying shares in addition to the income related opportunities.

You really know that it’s no longer your “grandfather’s stock market” when big pharma is no longer the keystone in everyone’s portfolio and is no longer making front page new on a daily basis. Instead, increasingly big pharma is playing second fiddle to smaller pharmaceutical companies, at least in garnering attention, unless it is involved in a proposed buy-out or merger, as is increasingly the case.

On a steady price decline since the end of January 2015, when the market started its own party mode, Merck shares are also ex-dividend this week and offer a better premium proposition than is normally the case when doing so.

Dow Chemical (NYSE:DOW) has for the past few months been held hostage by energy prices and will likely continue so while the supply – demand situation for oil evolves for better or worse.

The only good news is that while it may be unduly castigated for its joint energy holdings the impact has been relatively muted. During the past few months as shares have become more volatile its option premiums have understandably been increasing and making it again worthy of some consideration.

Although it doesn’t go ex-dividend for another 3 weeks I would already place my sights on trying to capture that dividend and would consider a longer term option contract in order to attempt to lock in several weeks of premiums in addition to the dividend as oil is likely to go up and down man
y times during that time frame.

Sometimes, the best approach during periods of advanced volatility is to try and ride things out by placing some time distance between your short option positions and events.

I was considering adding more shares of Mosaic (NYSE:MOS) a few weeks ago, as it passed the $52.50 level, thinking that it might be ready for a breakout, perhaps bringing it back to levels last seen before the breakdown of the potash cartel. I can’t really recall why I ultimately decided to look elsewhere, but instead shares went into another break-down.

That breakdown last week will hopefully be much smaller, since I already own shares and will take nowhere near as long to recoup the losses.

The nearly 8% decline in shares last week for no discernible reason has now brought them back to the upper range of where I had most recently been comfortable adding shares. While the broader macro-economic picture may suggest less acreage being put to use to add to the supply of already low priced crops there isn’t such a clean association between commodity prices and fertilizer prices.

With its ex-dividend date having just passed and with the recent trend still pointing downward, Mosaic may be a good candidate to consider the sale of put options as a means of potential entry into a long position, but at an even lower price.

Finally, for the third consecutive week I would consider establishing a position in shares of United Continental (NYSE:UAL) as part of a paired trade with an energy holding, especially if you crave the kind of excitement that Huntsman may not be able to provide.

I’ve been using Marathon Oil (NYSE:MRO) as the matching energy position and had my UAL shares assigned this past Friday, despite a large price drop for the second consecutive week just before expiration.

With the energy holding still in my portfolio I would consider another purchase of UAL, particularly if there is weakness in its shares to open the week. As has been the case previously, because of the volatility in shares the option premiums have been very generous. However, rather than directly taking advantage of those premiums, my preference has been to balance risk with reward and instead have opted for lower premiums by selecting deep in the money strike prices. Doing so allows shares to drop in price while still being able to deliver an acceptable ROI for the week.

Traditional Stocks: Dow Chemical

Momentum Stocks: Mosaic, United Continental

Double Dip Dividend: Huntsman (3/12), Coca Cola (3/12), Merck (3/12)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: none

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 – March 2 – 6, 2015 (Close)

 

 

Option to Profit Week in
Review –  March 2 – 6,  2015
 
NEW POSITIONS/STO NEW STO ROLLOVERS CALLS ASSIGNED/PUTS EXPIRED CALLS EXPIRED/PUTS ASSIGNED CLOSED
2 / 2 0 5 1  /  0 0  / 1 0

    

Weekly Up to Date Performance

March 2 – 6,   2015

Just an awful week to begin a month that is, so far, in as much contrast to February as February was to January.

If you don’t recall, January wasn’t a very good month.

New positions beat both the unadjusted and adjusted S&P 500 by 0.5% in a week that the market had no real stories to react to and seemed to trade in a
different vacuum each day, until the very end of the week.

The 2 new positions, despite beating the index, were still 1.1% lower while both the adjusted and unadjusted indexes were 1.6% lower.

Existing positions, however, under-performed the overall market by an usually large 2.0%, in part due to earnings or monthly sales related price drops in such companies as JOY and ANF. Additionally, energy and metals were also weak, undoing some of the previous month’s strength that contributed to out-performance.

Positions closed in 2015 continue to out-perform the market. They are an average of 5.3% higher, while the comparable time adjusted S&P 500 average performance has been 2.3% higher. That 3.0% difference represents a 133.5% performance differential.

 

The first 3 days of this week traded with unusual swings and very differently from the pre-opening futures that generally serve to set up the tone for the trading day. None of those days had any kind of news to warrant any kind of sizeable gains or losses, nor was there anything to warrant mid-day corrections.

Yet all of those things happened and on a repeating basis.

The only real news for the week came on Friday morning with the release of the Employment Situation Report and at least that was something that you could point your finger at if you were looking to blame something for another Friday plunge.

For most of the week without any real cues there was very little to react toward and the market was essentially very irrational all during the course of the week, with the possible exception of Thursday, which was simply a day with no news and no activity in the markets. Even oil, precious metals and interest rates traded in a steady state fashion on that day, while doing anything but for the remainder of the week.

On Friday, not to say that the market’s reaction to great employment news was irrational, but at least there was something that might paint a picture for the direction ahead or the prevailing mindset going forward.

The “good news is bad news” people made a return after a period of hibernation and they sold off in a big way in the belief that the employment statistics mean that the FOMC interest rate hikes are coming sooner than Janet Yellen had suggested just a week ago.

To me, it seems implausible that Janet Yellen would lead us down an illusory path or would so suddenly find herself changing her tone, yet that’s how the market reacted.

Forget about the anectdotal reports that lots of the new jobs were in the service sector and at the low end of that sector. Whether or not this month’s report presages real expansion or even presages the FOMC ‘s decision to raise rates, it’s still surprising that the market would be surprised by what we all know is coming.

Most of all, and the only thing that matters, this was not a very good week, especially if seeing some of the recent gains from energy and metal positions evaporate.

For the second consecutive week it was an example of how you just can’t anticipate or predict outcomes with any accuracy. What I thought had good chances for assignment turned out to fall by the wayside as the market’s selling accelerated as trading continued.

Fortunately, those positions that were in line to be assigned stayed close enough to their strikes to allow rollover of all of the call positions. 

The one assignment, and not the good kind, was the Gold Miners ETF puts, as gold plummeted today, as it and interest rates went in opposite directions after the morning’s Employment Situation Report.

Seeing how the GDX has been a recent trading standout, I don’t particularly mind taking ownership of shares as the one thing you know about every commodity is that their price cycles are a given. That makes them a little more reliable in serial trades despite their habit of taking large moves on a dime.

Some weeks, especially in January, it seemed that if not trading and re-trading GDX calls there would be nothing going on at all.

Besides being lucky enough to make all of those rollover trades, the other fortuitous thing this was the large number of dividends this week which some time soon will find their way back into the account.

As good as those may sound, they come nowhere close, however, to making up for an overall very bad week.

Starting next week off, just like this week, with less recycled cash than I had expected, it’s likely that the approach will be similar to this week and have caution as a primary characteristic. This week that caution was rewarded by virtue of simply not putting as much at risk and maybe even more caution would have been warranted.

With about 5 positions set to expire next week my focus will be to either see those be assigned or rolled over, possibly looking to bypass the following week, which is the end of the March 2015 option cycle.

Unless there will also be some technical factors in play as support levels on the S&P 500 are being approached, it’s not too likely that the fears about the timing of interest rates will carry through to next week, as there isn’t very much economic data being released that might confirm upward pressure on prices or wages.

Despite that, I’m not overly anxious to dip into the cash reserve as getting ready to begin the coming week.

Sometimes you just need some kind of proof or a sign that it’s safe to come out and play. Mostly that means continuing to get good economic news but not muddling their interpretation or acting as if the impacts of a strengthening dollar and increasing interest rates had never been considered before.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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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:   BAC, CHK

Puts Closed in order to take profits:  none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the next weekly cycle:  GDX, HAL, SNDK

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into extended weekly cycle:  GPS (4/10)

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the monthly cycleMRO

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

Calls Rolled Up, taking net profits into same cyclenone

New STO:  none

Put contracts expired: none

Put contracts rolled over: none

Long term call contracts sold:  none

Calls AssignedUAL

Calls Expired:  none

Puts AssignedGDX

Stock positions Closed to take profits:  none

Stock positions Closed to take losses: none

Calls Closed to Take Profits: none

Ex-dividend Positions: HAL (3/2 $0.19), JOY (3/2 $0.20), MOS (3/3 $0.25), BAC (3/4 $0.05), COH (3/4 $0.34), HFC (3/6 $0.32)

Ex-dividend Positions Next WeekNEM (3/10 $0.02), GME (3/13 $0.36)

 

 

For the coming week the existing positions have lots that still require the sale of contracts:   AGQ, ANF, AZN, CHK, CLF, COH, FAST, FCX, GDX, HAL, HFC, .INTC, JCP, JOY, LVS, MAT, MCP, MOS,  NEM, RIG, SBGI, 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 – March 6, 2015

 

  

 

Daily Market Update – March 6, 2015 (7:30 AM)

 

The Week in Review will be posted by 7 PM and the Weekend Update will be posted by Noon on Sunday.

 

The following trade outcomes are possible today:

AssignmentsUAL

Rollovers:  HAL, MRO, SNDK

ExpirationsGDX (put), GPS

 

The following were ex-dividend this week: HAL (3/2 $0.18), JOY (3/2 $0.20), MOS (3/3 $0.25), BAC (3/4 $0.05), COH (3/4 $0.34), HFC (3/6 $0.32)

The following will be ex-dividend next week: NEM (3/10 $0.02), GME (3/13 $0.36)

 

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

Daily Market Update – March 5, 2015 (Close)

 

  

 

Daily Market Update – March 5, 2015 (Close)

 

With the ECB announcing that it was leaving its rates unchanged early this morning and with the pre-open futures once again trading listlessly, you would think that not much would be in store for the regular trading session.

With the first 3 days of this week having traded identically to this morning, perhaps only differing in direction, each of those days saw wide trading ranges once the opening bell rang and closed with relatively large changes for the day.

What’s most notable is that there really hasn’t been any kind of news to account for the daily and intra-day swings.

That could have changed during this morning’s ECB press conference, as Mario Draghi had previously shown the ability to move stock markets, usually higher, but there shouldn’thave been and there weren’t too many surprises in anything that he had to say, as we all expected the ECB version of Quantitative Easing to begin shortly and that expectation was confirmed.

The one surprise to come may be the realization that there aren’t as many bonds available for purchase as there is demand from the ECB.

That would be interesting.

Meanwhile, while we awaited his words and responses to questioning, those market swings haven’t been limited to just stocks. Oil, metals and to a lesser degree interest rates have also been undecided in their direction the past few days and have also made some large moves without any news.

In that kind of environment it’s hard to justify putting too much new money at risk. For me, it’s easier to justify recycling money from assignments and perhaps holding some back.

Despite yesterday’s sell off and first triple digit loss in quite a while those positions that are set to expire this week weren’t disadvantaged, with the exception of the Gold Miners ETF put, but if you’ve had a long position in that ETF you can understand why I wouldn’t mind taking assignment, if necessary, as the volatility in precious metals and its proxy, the miners, has made that ETF a very frequent trading vehicle over the past few months.

For the final two days of the trading week I was just hoping that nothing upsets the status quo as I would very much like to see a preponderance of assignments, but wouldn’t necessarily be upset if some of those hoped for assignments became rollovers, instead, as was the case last week.

Because that latter possibility is definitely better than the alternative to the contracts simply expiring out of the money if there had been some sign of deterioration in pricing today, knowing that there is a potentially significant event tomorrow morning, there may have been reason to jump the gun a little bit and make rollover trades, where possible.

Tomorrow’s Employment Situation Report isn’t expected to offer much in the way of surprises, especially after Wednesday’s ADP number was in line with expectations, so there’s not too much reason to think that there will be a decided increase in risk. However, with the first 3 days of this week
having set the tone, it’s probably not a bad idea to be prepared for any kind of reaction, even in the event of no real news worthy of reaction.

Today’s lackluster action did tone things down and there was little excitement to be seen anywhere, but anything may go if those numbers tomorrow, including revisions of previous months paint a picture other than what we are all already envisioning.