Daily Market Update – November 10, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 10,  2015  (7:30 AM)

 

For people who like to track such things, yesterday’s very unexpected and unwarranted market decline brought the DJIA. on a YTD basis to a loss.

The S&P 500 isn’t very far behind and stands only about 20 points, or 1% away from the flat line, with only about 7 weeks left to go in 2015.

It’s really hard to say what was responsible for yesterday’s sharp decline, which was actually less of a sharp decline after it all settled.

It could be that some finally came to the realization that we’re about to enter into an era that we haven’t seen in about 9 years, as the FOMC has to be getting as ready as it ever has to institute that very first interest rate hike.

However, given the fact that no one believes that rate increase will be more than 0.5%, with most in the 0.25% camp, it’s equally hard to understand what the logical basis is for the belief that even the larger end of that rise would result in any meaningful slowing of any economic expansion.

That’s generally the fear, but it usually only becomes a real issue when in hindsight you come to the realization that the cumulative interest rate hikes over time have tipped the economy.

That’s just not likely to occur with the first in a series, especially when there’s no indication of a really heated up economy that’s in danger of boiling.

Besides, history shows that the early stages of interest rate increases are during a healthy economy and a healthy stock market.

That’s what you would expect if the market is looking at fundamentals and is also discounting the future 6 months, as is widely believed to be the case.

Who knows what accounted for yesterday, but this morning shows some moderation as the futures are trading, although they showed the same thing yesterday and then the bottom just dropped out when the bell finally rang.

With yesterday’s decline I wasn’t as enthused about spending money from cash reserves as I might have been had the decline been more moderate. I just like to have some idea of why a market is climbing strongly or declining strongly, especially the latter.

The exercise of hindsight may demonstrate that it would have been a good idea to dip further into cash reserves, as most declines since the August correction began have represented some good entry points.

The difference here, perhaps, is that even with yesterday’s decline, the S&P 500 is now only down about 3% from its all time highs. That leaves plenty of room for more downside, especially given the uninterrupted climb higher since the beginning of October.

I’ll still be on the lookout for anything that may seem like a bargain today and would be especially attracted to more dividend paying positions, but caution may still be warranted.

At this point, I’m more concerned with positions expiring next week and am hopeful that among them will be some assignments and rollovers. I don’t really want to add much to that list if buying any other new positions this week and would like to get much better diversified in terms of expiration dates.

That will be played by ear as the week plays itself out.

Daily Market Update – November 9, 2015 (Close)

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 9,  2015  (Close)

 

Last week was another in a series of weeks with the market moving higher as it now seems as if it is fully ready to accept an increase in interest rates, maybe as early as this December.

This week may provide more of the data that the FOMC is seeking in order to justify their decision, but after last week’s Employment Situation Report that came in about 80% higher than what the FOMC indicated would be a level sufficient to warrant such an increase, it seems fairly certain that decision will be made very soon.

The data that’s coming this week will be from a number of national retailers and it will continue through to next week. Very much on an anecdotal level, I went into two big box retailers yesterday and they were packed

Also coming this week, at the very end of the week, will be the official Retail Sales figures. The government’s data never seems to be as compelling as what the CEOs and CFOs of those national big box retailers have to present.

What may really be key this week is not so much the top and bottom lines for retailers, although it would be nice to see some improvement on the top lines and a bottom line that is less manipulated by stock buy backs, but forward guidance. Most retailers tend to move on their forward guidance, which typically compounds the impact of the earnings that were just reported.

Insofar as the data being reported is already at least 3 months old, what may be far more important is what trends those retailers may be seeing in their stores.

They tend not to be overly optimistic when providing guidance, so any positive tone should be a signal that personal spending is finally on the move higher and the FOMC is sure to take note.

What we’re looking for is that inflection point that takes CEOs from cautious to optimistic as they finally see a consumer that feels confident that their new job has some security and now they are willing to make up for lost time not having done much in the way of discretionary spending.

As long as the market is going to continue interpreting good economic news as being good for the market, that should be a signal to move higher.

This morning, the pre-open futures were on the weak side, but only mildly so. Following last week, there was not too much reason to pay attention to the early direction of trading. What wasn’t terribly expected was the ferocity of the sell-off that started right at the opening bell and then lasted until noon.

After a quiet week of adding new positions last week and with no positions expiring this week, I would have liked to take cash reserves and do something with them, but when you see such a sharp decline and for no real reason, it usually doesn’t make too much sense to go on a spending spree.

After 2 assignments last week I’m at my highest cash level in quite a while, although I’d like to see it get even higher. However, that has to be balanced with a desire to generate some weekly income.

With any weakness to open the week, as opposed to last week, I would have been happy to part with some of those cash reserves, but as it would turn out, I was more reluctant than I would have expected.

With volatility remaining at such low levels after another week of the market having moved higher, I’d again like to focus on positions also paying dividends this week or next in an effort to supplement the cash stream in the coming weeks. Today’s new position stayed laser focused.

With a number of positions set to expire next week, the likelihood is that any new purchases this week will continue use either weekly options or seek to bypass the coming week and go straight to the first week of the December 2015 option cycle.

I hope that tomorrow turns out to be another of these week days to let the market take a little bit of a breath after its very impressive gains of the past 5 weeks. Sometimes it has to do s
o in big chunks, though.

Daily Market Update – November 9, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 9,  2015  (7:30 AM)

 

Last week was another in a series of weeks with the market moving higher as it now seems as if it is fully ready to accept an increase in interest rates, maybe as early as this December.

This week may provide more of the data that the FOMC is seeking in order to justify their decision, but after last week’s Employment Situation Report that came in about 80% higher than what the FOMC indicated would be a level sufficient to warrant such an increase, it seems fairly certain that decision will be made very soon.

The data that’s coming this week will be from a number of national retailers and it will continue through to next week. Very much on an anecdotal level, I went into two big box retailers yesterday and they were packed

Also coming this week, at the very end of the week, will be the official Retail Sales figures. The government’s data never seems to be as compelling as what the CEOs and CFOs of those national big box retailers have to present.

What may really be key this week is not so much the top and bottom lines for retailers, although it would be nice to see some improvement on the top lines and a bottom line that is less manipulated by stock buy backs, but forward guidance. Most retailers tend to move on their forward guidance, which typically compounds the impact of the earnings that were just reported.

Insofar as the data being reported is already at least 3 months old, what may be far more important is what trends those retailers may be seeing in their stores.

They tend not to be overly optimistic when providing guidance, so any positive tone should be a signal that personal spending is finally on the move higher and the FOMC is sure to take note.

What we’re looking for is that inflection point that takes CEOs from cautious to optimistic as they finally see a consumer that feels confident that their new job has some security and now they are willing to make up for lost time not having done much in the way of discretionary spending.

As long as the market is going to continue interpreting good economic news as being good for the market, that should be a signal to move higher.

This morning, the pre-open futures are on the weak side, but only mildly so. Following last week, there’s not too much reason to pay attention to the early direction of trading.

On the other hand, after a quiet week of adding new positions last week and with no positions expiring this week, I would like to take cash reserves and do something with them.

After 2 assignments last week I’m at my highest cash level in quite a while, although I’d like to see it get even higher. However, that has to be balanced with a desire to generate some weekly income.

With any weakness to open the week, as opposed to last week, I would be happy to part with some of those cash reserves.

With volatility remaining at such low levels after another week of the market having moved higher, I’d again like to focus on positions also paying dividends this week or next in an effort to supplement the cash stream in the coming weeks.

With a number of positions set to expire next week, the likelihood is that any new purchases this week will use either weekly options or seek to bypass the coming week and go straight to the first week of the December 2015 option cycle.

Dashboard – November 9 – 13, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

SELECTIONS

MONDAY:  National retailers begin to report earnings this week and the official Retail Sales report comes at the end of the week, so we could get some important data with regard to justifying an interest rate increase. After another strong week last week, the futures look like they are getting ready to begin the week on a more cautious note.

TUESDAY:   It’s difficult to explain the kind of loss seen yesterday other than to ascribe it as “selling on the presumed news” of an interest rate hike or realization that the free low interest rate ride was really finally coming to its end, soon to be replaced by another low interest rate ride.

WEDNESDAY:  Yesterday showed a nice early morning recovery from its losses and this morning the futures are indicating some follow through from its trending higher to close the day. With banks closed today, despite only mild changes in the early trading, there could be some exaggerated moves as the day goes on

THURSDAY:  Yesterday’s very disappointing report from Macy’s really cast a pall on retail’s outlook for the coming year and came as a real surprise to me, although the resultant weakness may now be reason to consider entry into a sector that is never going to go away, even as online may be garnering supremacy

FRIDAY:. Too much confusion and too many mixed messages sent markets to sharp declines yesterday as 2015 now has only about 7 weeks to end up in the black. This morning’s pre-opening futures don’t give an appearance of making too much of an effort to push things over the flat line, though

 

 

 

 

 



 

                                                                                                                                           

Today's TradesCash-o-Meter

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak PeekPie Chart Distribution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Summary

  

Weekend Update – November 8, 2015

For a very brief period of time before October’s release of the Employment Situation Report and for about 90 minutes afterward, the stock market had started doing something we hadn’t seen for quite a while.

Surprisingly, traders had been interpreting economic news in a rational sort of way. Normally, you wouldn’t have to use the word "surprisingly" to describe that kind of behavior, but for the preceding few years the market was focused on just how great the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy was for equity investors and expressed fear at anything that would take away their easy access to cheap money or would make alternative investments more competitive.

The greatest increment of growth in our stock market over the past few years occurred when bad news was considered good and good news was considered good.

To be more precise, however, that greatest increment of growth occurred when there was the absence of good economic news in the United States and the presence of good economic news in China.

What that meant was that good economic news in the United States was most often greeted as being a threat. Meanwhile back in the good old days when China was reporting one unbelievable quarter after another, their good economic news fueled the fortunes of many US companies doing business there.

Then the news from China began to falter and we were at a very odd intersection when the market was achieving new highs even as so many companies were in correction mode as a Chinese slowdown and supremacy of American currency conspired to offset the continuing gift from the FOMC.

At the time of the release of October’s Employment Situation Report the market initially took the stunningly low number and downward revisions to previous months as reflecting a sputtering economy and added to the losses that started some 6 weeks earlier and that had finally taken the market into a long overdue correction.

90 minutes later came an end to rational behavior and the market rallied in the belief that the bad news on employment could only mean a continuation of low interest rates.

In other words, stock market investors, particularly the institutions that drive the trends were of the belief that fewer people going back to work was something that was good for those in a position to put money to work in the stock market.

Of course, they would never come right out and say that. Instead, there was surely some proprietary algorithm at work that set up a cascading avalanche of buy orders or some technical factors that conveniently removed all human emotion and empathy from the equation.

As bad as the employment numbers seemed, the real surprise came a few weeks later as the FOMC emerged from its meeting and despite not raising rates indicated that employment gains at barely above the same level everyone had taken to be disappointing would actually be sufficient to justify an interest rate increase.

The same kind of reversal that had been seen earlier in the month after the Employment Situation Report was digested was also seen after the most recent FOMC Statement release had started settling into the minds of traders. However, instead of taking the market off in an inappropriate direction, there came the realization that an increase in interest rates can only mean that the economy is improving and that can only be a good thing.

Fast forward a couple of weeks to this past week and with the uncertainty of the week ending release of the Employment Situation Report the market went nicely higher to open the first 2 days of trading.

There seemed to be a message being sent that the market was ready to once again accept an imminent interest rate increase, just as it had done a few months prior.

That seemed like a very adult-like sort of thing to do.

The real surprise came when the number of new jobs was reported to be nearly double that of the previous month and was coupled with reports of the lowest unemployment rate in almost 8 years and with a large increase in wages.

Most any other day over the past few years and that combination of news would have sent the market swooning enough to make even the fattest finger proud.

With all of those people now heading back to work and being in a position to begin spending their money in a long overdue return to conspicuous consumption, this coming week’s slew of national retailers reporting earnings may provide some real insight into the true health of the economy.

While the results of the past quarter may not yet fully reflect the improving fortunes of the workforce, I’m more inclined to listen closely to the forecasting abilities of Terry Lundgren, CEO of Macy’s (M) and his fellow retail chieftains than to most any nation’s official data set.

Hopefully, the good employment news of last week will be one of many more good pieces to come and will continue to be accepted for what they truly represent.

While the cycle of increasing workforce participation, rising wages and increased discretionary spending may stop being a virtuous one at some point, that point appears to be far off into the future and for now, I would trade off the high volatility that I usually crave for some sustained move higher that reflects some real heat in the economy.

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

What better paired trade could there be than Aetna (AET) and Altria (MO)?

I don’t mean that in terms of making the concurrent trades by taking a long position in one and a short position in the other, but rather on the basis of their respective businesses.

In the long term, Altria products will likely hasten your death while still making lots of money in the process and Aetna’s products will begrudgingly try to delay your death, being now forced to do so even when the costs of doing so will exceed the premiums being paid.

Either way, you lose, although there may be some room for a winner or two in either or both of these positions as they both had bad weeks even as the broader market finished higher for the 6th consecutive week.

Both have, in fact, badly trailed the S&P 500 since it started its rally after the October Employment Situation Report.

Aetna, although still sporting a low "beta," a measure of volatility, has been quite volatile of late and its option premium is reflecting that recent volatility even as overall volatility has returned to its historically low levels for the broader market.

With Aetna having recently reported earnings and doing what so many have done, that is beating on earnings, but missing on revenues, it had suffered a nearly 8% decline from its spike upon earnings.

That seems like a reasonable place to consider wading in, particularly with optimistic forward guidance projections and a very nice selection of option premiums.

Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) is ex-dividend this week. Although its dividend is well below that of dividend paying stocks in the S&P 500 its recent proposal to buy competitor Rite Aid (RAD) has increased its volatility and made it more appealing of a dividend related trade.

With some displeasure already being expressed over the buyout, Walgreens Boots Alliance will surely do the expected and sell or close some existing stores of both brands and move on with things. But until then, the premiums will likely continue somewhat elevated as Walgreens seeks to further spread its footprint across the globe.

With about a 10% drop since reporting earnings at the end of October there isn’t too much reason to suspect that it will be single out from the broader market to go much lower, unless some very significant and loud opposition to its expansion plans surfaces. With the Thanksgiving holiday rapidly approaching, I don’t think that those objections are going to be voiced in the next week or two.

International Paper (IP) is also ex-dividend this coming week and I think that I’m ready to finally add some shares to an existing lot. Like many other stocks in the past year, it’s road to recovery has been unusually slow and it is a stock that has been among those falling on hard times even as the market rallied to its highs.

While it has recovered quite a bit from its recent low, International Paper has given back some of that gain since reporting earnings last week.

Its price is now near, although still lower than the range at which I like to consider buying or adding shares. The impending dividend is often a catalyst for considering a purchase and that is definitely the case as it goes ex-dividend in a few days.

Its premium is not overly generous, as the option market isn’t perceiving too much uncertainty in the coming week, but the stock does offer a very nice dividend and I may consider using an extended option to try and make it easier to recoup the share price drop due to its dividend distribution. 

Macy’s reports earnings this week and it has had a rough ride after each of its last two earnings reports. When Macy’s is the one reporting store closures, you know that something is a miss in retail or at least some real sea change is occurring.

The fact that the sea change is now showing profits at Amazon (AMZN) for a second consecutive quarter may spell bad things for Macy’s.

The options market must see things precisely that way, because it is implying a 9.2% move in Macy’s next week, which is unusually large for it, although no doubt having taken those past two quarters into account.

Normally, I look for opportunities to sell puts on those companies reporting earnings when I can achieve a 1% ROI on that sale by selecting a strike price outside of the range implied by the option market.

In this case that’s possible, although utilizing a strike that’s 10% below Friday’s close doesn’t offer too large of a margin for error.

However, I think that CEO Lundgren is going to breathe some life into shares with his guidance. I think he understands the consumer as well as anyone, just as he had some keen insight long before anyone else, when explaining why the energy and gas price dividend being received by consumers wasn’t finding its way to retailers, nearly a year ago.

Finally, the most interesting trade of the week may be Target (TGT).

Actually, it may be a trade that takes 2 weeks to play out as the stock is ex-dividend on Monday of the following week and then reports earnings two days later.

Being ex-dividend on a Monday means that if assigned early it would have to occur by Friday of this coming week. However, due to earnings being released the following week the option premiums are significantly enhanced.

What that offers is the opportunity to consider buying shares and selling an extended weekly, deep in the money call with the aim of seeing the shares assigned early.

For example, at Friday’s close of $77.21, the sale of a November 20, 2015 $75.50 call would provide a premium of $2.60.

That would leave a net of $0.89 if shares were assigned early, or an ROI of 1.15% for the 5 day holding, with shares more likely to be assigned early the more Target closes above $76.06 by the close of Friday’s trading.

However, if not assigned early that ROI could climb to 1.9% for the 2 week holding period even if Target shares fall by as much as 2.2% upon earnings.

So maybe it’s not always a misplaced sense of logic to consider bad news as being a source for good things to come.

 

Traditional Stocks: Aetna, Altria

Momentum Stocks: none

Double-Dip Dividend: International Paper (11/12 $0.44), Target (11/16 $0.56), Walgreens Boots Alliance (11/12 $0.36)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: Macy’s (11/11 AM)

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.