Daily Market Update – November 3, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 3,  2015  (7:00 AM)

 

Yesterday was a really unexpected move higher to start the week.

When you think about how the market reacted to the last release of the Employment Situation Report, there was a quick shift in sentiment as the October numbers were disappointingly low.

Right up to that report the market had finally started looking at economic news in a rational way and its initial response to the bad news was exactly what a rational person would have predicted and the market added to its already 10% loss having started in the latter half of August.

It got down to about a 12% loss and then just turned around on a dime early in the morning of that release, getting to where it ended up yesterday, now less than 2% below its all time highs.

So yesterday’s move higher in advance of this Friday’s release of the next round of employment numbers means only one of two things now that the FOMC seems to be saying that the number that we thought was so disappointing last month, is actually just fine and dandy in justifying an interest rate increase.

So, either the market went higher yesterday in expectation of continued bad news, meaning bad news is good news, or it went higher in expectation that Friday will bring good news.

It’s hard to believe that the former is the case and maybe the market is setting itself up to respond in a rational way, although you would have expected some negative response, given how so much of the rise from the 12% drop seemed to be fueled by the “bad news is good news” kind of mentality.

But that’s the problem with applying rational thought processes to what is really an irrational entity, despite all of its metrics, charting and analyses.

This morning’s pre-opening futures aren’t yet indicating that it would add to yesterday’s gains, but you certainly wouldn’t have predicted yesterday’s gain from yesterday’s p[re-opening futures.

With the fairly rapid and sustained climb yesterday there wasn’t very much opportunity to jump in and buy anything. Most of what I have my eye on this week are dividend related and today would be the last day to make those purchases. If today comes and goes without those buying opportunities, it may end up being a very quiet week.

With a few positions set to expire this week there are still some opportunities to either rollover those positions or potentially see assignments, but as the week progresses, if those dividend related opportunities disappear, the likelihood is that any new trades will then look at an expiration the following week.

After having rolled over next week’s sole expiring position yesterday, I wouldn’t mind being able to populate next week’s list of expiring positions, particularly if there may be a chance of getting some assignments this week.

Otherwise, it will be another morning of watching and waiting to see how sentiment unfolds. I wouldn’t mind a little weakness, especially in those ex-dividend positions in an effort to set up some trades for the week.

Daily Market Update – November 2, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 2,  2015  (Close)

 

While it’s still a busy week for earnings ahead, the real action starts at the end of the week and then next week.

At the end of this week is yet another Employment Situation Report and next week begins a slew of earnings from big box retailers.

It was just a month ago that following an initial negative reaction to a worse than expected Employment Situation Report that the market turned things around and has, in the course of those 4 weeks, almost entirely erased a 12% decline.

That turned out to help make October a really great market month, as long as you started your investing career in the market after 10 AM on that Friday morning.

Undoubtedly, in a few years there will be someone on some financial news network show whose returns will be based on having started tracking performance from that mid-morning.

What makes those two events so important is that good numbers from both could easily give the FOMC the push that it wants from the data.

Particularly since the FOMC has seemed to suggest that 150,000 new jobs would be sufficient to give them reason to do what now seems very clear that they are aching to get done.

While the FOMC has repeatedly said that they will be data driven, they have never said what thresholds they would use in making their decisions, so the suggestion that 150,000 may be enough, particularly as the last report, which was a rare one coming in at below 200,000, would no longer be considered “disappointing.”

Beyond that, next week’s retail reports will probably give an earlier indication of what the consumer is doing, as opposed to the official GDP reports.

While the earnings are backward looking, if retailers start painting some optimistic pictures with regard to forward guidance, you can feel pretty assured, that barring some unforeseen calamity, things are going to get better and better.

That would really be what the FOMC would be looking for as a signal to finally raise interest rates.

While we are all expecting that such a decision won’t come before the December meeting and many believe that it won’t come until 2016, back in October when the word didn’t come, it was made clear that the FOMC didn’t have to wait until its next meeting to make and announce a decision.

So everyone should still be on their toes between now and Thanksgiving.

The market was set to start the week off with a mild gain, but like last week, there wasn’t too much reason to expect any big moves.

So of course, what did we get? A big move to start the week, only it went higher, instead of where I was hoping it might go.

Last week also didn’t need an excuse to start running higher in advance of the FOMC Statement release and then had sufficient reason to make big moves afterward.

But that was mid-week. This time around I thought we might have to wait until the end of the week to get a fire lit, but you never do know.

With some assignments and cash to spend, I’m willing to do so, especially if there’s a dividend to be captured. With a few positions already set to expire this week and some ex-dividend positions already in the mix, while willing to spend, I may be waiting for some relative weakness and would likely think about weekly contracts, if parting with some money.

For now, I’ll probably let the early trades work themselves out tomorrow, because they sure didn’t cooperate today and see what kind of tone develops by mid-morning before making any decisions on new positions.


Daily Market Update – November 2, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – November 2,  2015  (7:30 AM)

 

While it’s still a busy week for earnings ahead, the real action starts at the end of the week and then next week.

At the end of this week is yet another Employment Situation Report and next week begins a slew of earnings from big box retailers.

It was just a month ago that following an initial negative reaction to a worse than expected Employment Situation Report that the market turned things around and has, in the course of those 4 weeks, almost entirely erased a 12% decline.

That turned out to help make October a really great market month, as long as you started your investing career in the market after 10 AM on that Friday morning.

Undoubtedly, in a few years there will be someone on some financial news network show whose returns will be based on having started tracking perfromance from that mid-morning.

What makes those two events so important is that good numbers from both could easily give the FOMC the push that it wants from the data.

Particularly since the FOMC has seemed to suggest that 150,000 new jobs would be sufficient to give them reason to do what now seems very clear that they are aching to get done.

While the FOMC has repeatedly said that they will be data driven, they have never said what thresholds they would use in making their decisions, so the suggestion that 150,000 may be enough, particularly as the last report, which was a rare one coming in at below 200,000, would no longer be considered “disappointing.”

Beyond that, next week’s retail reports will probably give an earlier indication of what the consumer is doing, as opposed to the official GDP reports.

While the earnings are backward looking, if retailers start painting some optimistic pictures with regard to forward guidance, you can feel pretty assured, that barring some unforeseen calamity, things are going to get better and better.

That would really be what the FOMC would be looking for as a signal to finally raise interest rates.

While we are all expecting that such a decision won’t come before the December meeting and many believe that it won’t come until 2016, back in October when the word didn’t come, it was made clear that the FOMC didn’t have to wait until its next meeting to make and announce a decision.

So everyone should still be on their toes between now and Thanksgiving.

The market is set to start the week off with a mild gain, but like last week, there’s not too much reason to expect any big moves.

Of course, last week didn’t need an excuse to start running higher in advance of the FOMC STatement release and then had sufficient reason to make big moves afterward.

That was mid-week. This time around we may have to wait until the end of the week to get a fire lit, but you never do know.

With some assignments and cash to spend, I’m willing to do so, especially if there’s a dividend to be captured. With a few positions already set to expire this week and some ex-dividend positions already in the mix, while willing to spend, I may be waiting for some relative weakness and would likely think about weekly contracts, if parting with some money.

For now, I’ll probably let the early trades work themselves out and see what kind of tone develops by mid-morning before making any decisions on new positions.


Dashboard – November 2 – 6, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

SELECTIONS

MONDAY:   It’s a quiet earnings week as we prepare for next week’s retail earnings, but the week does end with a potentially very significant Employment Situation Report

TUESDAY:   Yesterday was a surprise start to the week, which may be suggesting that the market is again ready to accept good news as being good news, as the FOMC’s Employment threshold of 150,000 new jobs seems easy to beat, thereby more likely leading to an interest rate increase

WEDNESDAY:  After 2 days of nice and unexpected gains, China joined the party overnight. This morning the futures are again starting off listless, just as they did the first 2 days, so it will be anyone’s guess, as the ADP Private Sector Employment data is released today and may set the stage for Friday’s Employment Situation Report

THURSDAY:  Yesterday was a little respite from the strong advances to start the week. Today looks as if it could be another quiet day, although the early morning trading meant nothing on Monday and Tuesday. Today, though, would be a perfect day to exercise some caution ahead of tomorrow’s employment Situation Report, with everyone focusing on that 150,000 number.

FRIDAY:. Two quick moves higher to start the week, then 2 quiet days and now today may be a day of reckoning as the market sits flat awaiting the Employment Situation Report to end the week

 

 

 

 

 



 

                                                                                                                                           

Today's TradesCash-o-Meter

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak PeekPie Chart Distribution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Summary

  

Weekend Update – November 1, 2015

The recently deceased Hall of Fame catcher, Yogi Berra, had many quotes attributed to him, some of which he admitted were uttered by him.

One of those allegedly genuine quotes had Yogi Berra giving directions to his home, ending with the words “when you get to the fork in the road, take it.”

People have likely written PhD dissertations on the many levels of meaning that could be contained in that expression in the belief that there was something more deep to it when it was originally uttered.

We’ll probably never know whether the original expression had an underlying depth to it or was simply an incomplete thought that took on a life of its own.

Nearly each month during the Janet Yellen reign as Chairman of the Federal Reserve we’ve been wondering what path the FOMC would take when faced with a potential decision.

Each month it seems that investors felt that they were being faced with a fork in the road and there was neither much in the way of data to decide which way to go, just as the FOMC was itself looking for the data that justifies taking action.

While that decision process hasn’t really taken on a life of its own, the various and inconsistent market responses to the decisions all resulting in a lack of action have taken on a life of their own.

Over much of Yellen’s tenure the market has rallied in the day or days leading up to the FOMC Statement release and I had been expecting the same this past week, until having seen that surge in the final days of the week prior.

Once that week ending surge took place it was hard to imagine that there would still be such unbridled enthusiasm prior to the release of the FOMC’s decision. It was just too much to believe that the market would risk even more on what could only be a roll of the dice.

Last week the market stood at the fork in the road on Monday and Tuesday and finally made a decision prior to the FOMC release, only to reverse that decision and then reverse it again.

I don’t think that’s what Yogi Berra had in mind.

With the FOMC’s non-decision now out of the way and in all likelihood no further decision until at least December, the market is now really standing at that fork in the road.

With retail earnings beginning the week after next we could begin seeing the first real clues of the long awaited increase in consumer spending that could be just the data that the FOMC has been craving to justify what it increasingly wants to do.

The real issue is what road will the market take if those retail earnings do show anything striking at all. Will the market take the “good news is bad news” road or the “good news is good news” path?

Trying to figure that out is probably about as fruitless as trying to understand what Yogi Berra really meant.

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

When it comes to stocks, I’m often at my happiest when I can go in and out of the same stocks on a serial basis.

While it may be more exciting to discover a new stock or two every week to trust with your money, when it comes to making a choice, I’d much rather take the boring path at the fork.

For those inclined to believe that Yogi Berra meant to tell his prospective guests that they shouldn’t worry when they got to the fork in the road, because both paths could lead to his home, I’m inclined to believe that the boring path will have fewer bumps in its road.

After 2 successive weeks of being in and out of Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) and Seagate Technology (NASDAQ:STX), I’m ready to do each or both again in the coming week.

Morgan Stanley, which was ex-dividend last week, has now recovered about half of what it lost when it reported earnings earlier in the month. Its decline this past Friday and hopefully a little more as the new week gets set to begin, would again make it an attractive stock to (“re”)-consider.

While volatility has been declining, Morgan Stanley’s premium still continues elevated, even though there’s little reason to believe that there will be any near term reason for downward price pressure. In fact, a somewhat hawkish FOMC statement might give reason to suspect that the financial sector’s prospects may be brighter in the coming quarter than they were in this quarter past.

Seagate Technology, w
hich reported earnings last week is ex-dividend this week and I would like to take advantage of either the very generous dividend, the call option premium or both.

For the past 2 weeks I had sold puts, but was prepared to take assignment rather than rolling over the short put option position in the event of an adverse price movement.

That was due to the upcoming ex-dividend date and an unwillingness as a put seller to receive a lower premium than would ordinarily be the case if no dividend was in the equation. Just as call buyers often pay a greater premium than they should when a stock is going ex-dividend, put sellers frequently receive a lower premium when selling in advance of an ex-dividend date.

I would rather be on the long end of a pricing inefficiency.

But as Seagate Technology does go ex-dividend and while its volatility remains elevated there are a number of potential combinations, all of which could give satisfactory returns if Seagate spends another week trading in a defined range.

Based upon its Friday closing price a decision to sell a near the money $38 weekly contract, $37.50 or $37 contract can be made depending on the balance between return and certainty of assignment that one desires.

For me, the sweet spot is the $37.50 contract, which if assigned early could still offer a net 1.2% ROI for a 2 day holding period.

I would trade away the dividend for that kind of return. However, if the dividend is captured, there is still sufficient time left on a weekly contract for some recovery in price to either have the position assigned or perhaps have the option rolled over to add to the return.

MetLife (NYSE:MET) is ex-dividend this week and then reports earnings after the closing bell on that same day.

Like Morgan Stanley, it stands to benefit in the event that an interest rate increase comes sooner rather than later.

Since the decision to exercise early has to be made on the day prior to earnings being announced this may also be a situation in which a number of different strike prices may be considered for the sale of calls, depending on the certainty with which one wants to enter and exit the position, relative top what one considers an acceptable ROI for what could be as little as a 2 day position.

Since MetLife has moved about 5% higher in the past 2 weeks, I’d be much more interested in opening a position in advance of the ex-dividend date and subsequent earnings announcement if shares fell a bit more to open the week.

If you have a portfolio that’s heavy in energy positions, as I do, it’s hard to think about adding another energy position.

Even as I sit on a lot of British Petroleum (NYSE:BP) that is not hedged with calls written against those shares, I am considering adding more shares this week as British Petroleum will be ex-dividend.

Unlike Seagate Technology and perhaps even MetLife, the British Petroleum position is one that I would consider because I want to retain the dividend and would also hope to be in a position to participate in some upside potential in shares.

That latter hope is one that has been dashed many times over the past year if you’ve owned many energy positions, but there have certainly been times to add new positions over that same past year. If anything has been clear, though, is that the decision to add new energy positions shouldn’t have been with a buy and hold mentality as any gains have been regularly erased.

With much of its litigation and civil suit woes behind it, British Petroleum may once again be like any other energy company these days, except for the fact that it pays a 6.7% dividend.

If not too greedy over the selection of a strike price in the hopes of participating in any upside potential, it may be possible to accumulate some premiums and dividends, before someone in a position to change their mind, decides to do so regarding offering that 6.7% dividend.

Finally, if there’s any company that has reached a fork in the road, it’s Lexmark (NYSE:LXK).

A few years ago Lexmark re-invented itself, just as its one time parent, International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM), did some years earlier.

The days about being all about hardware are long gone for both, but now there’s reason to be circumspect about being all about services, as well, as Lexmark is considering strategic alternatives to its continued existence.

I have often liked owning shares of Lexmark following a sharp drop and in advance of its ex-dividend date. It
won’t be ex-dividend until early in the December 2015 cycle and there may be some question as to whether it can afford to continue that dividend.

However, in this case, there may be some advantage to dropping or even eliminating the dividend. It’s not too likely that Lexmark’s remaining investor base is there for the dividend nor would flee if the dividend was sacrificed, but that move to hold on to its cash could make Lexmark more appealing to a potential suitor.

With an eye toward Lexmark being re-invented yet again, I may consider the purchase of shares following this week’s downgrade to a “Strong Sell” and looking at a December 2015 contract with an out of the money strike price and with a hope of getting out of the position before the time for re-invention has passed.

In Lexmark’s case, waiting too long may be an issue of sticking a fork in it to see if its finally done.

Traditional Stocks: Morgan Stanley

Momentum Stocks: Lexmark

Double-Dip Dividend: British Petroleum (11/4 $0.60), MetLife (11/4 $0.38), Seagate Technology (11/4 $0.63)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: MetLife (11/4 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.