Daily Market Update – April 15, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 15, 2014 (9:15 AM)

Yesterday was a really interesting day in the market.

I didn’t get too much done but I did enjoy most of the day as that old adage about a rising tide played true.

After a month or more of disappointing fizzled rallies to start the day the one from yesterday seemed to be the real thing until the final 90 minutes of trading.

It seemed sort of cruel to watch paper gains disappear after putting a nearly a full day but given how the market has been going lately it should have been expected. At least if the deterioration of gains started after only an hour of trading you didn’t feel as if you had that much invested on an emotional level. But to go nearly the whole day and then watch everything disappear is really deflating.

What wasn’t expected was the reversal rally that occurred in the final 30 minutes that restored the market to its highs for the day. That bounce really went against every logical scenario that anyone could have envisioned.

While there was reason to believe that Citigroup’s earnings helped the market get the week off to a good start, there was plenty of reason to believe that some would take the opportunity to take some cash off the table. What there was little reason to believe was that there would be strong and sustained buying going into the close of trading.

Regardless of how you look at things its hard to come up with an interpretation that’s anything other than optimistic. Who in their right mind would rush in to save a market that had a failed effort to break out of its downward trajectory?

The fact that it actually happened that way is what made it such an interesting day. Triple digit gains and losses are a dime a dozen but that late recovery of early gains was really a thing of beauty and rarity.

Even if the pre-open futures aren’t showing much in the way of follow through to the strong close it has to leave an encouraging feeling among those invested or thinking of investing.

I’d like to take some of that encouragement and apply it toward the rest of this holiday shortened week, but I still feel a need to stay on course and hope to secure premiums from existing positions this week instead of depleting cash even further.

My confidence could be supremely restored if I could see a nice assortment of assignments and rollovers on Thursday and toward that end some continuance of yesterday’s strength, even if muted, would be very nice.

While I’m not averse to adding new positions this week it may end up being among those very quiet weeks. With a fair number of expiring positions this week I really would prefer to have any remaining new positions expire at some other time. That may mean looking for new positions later in the week for those that will have their April 25, 2014 options appear only later in the week.

Also, with just a 4 day week, which is now down to 3 days, those premiums are somewhat lower, so there is reason to consider a slightly longer term contract.

For now I’d be happy just adding to the bottom line and letting the tide keep doing its thing as we all try to figure out where exactly the market is getting its cues.

If you haven’t been confused, you just haven’t been paying attention.

That may put you at an advantage.

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 14, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 14, 2014 (Close)

There was lots of nervousness over the weekend as concerns centered on Russian intentions over eastern Ukraine.

Since that was clearly an identified risk factor during Friday’s trading no one would have blamed traders for really accelerating the selling that was already a follow through to Thursday’s sell-off.

But it didn’t happen that way despite a very large order imbalance that should have driven the market even lower at the close of trading.

I suppose that could be taken as some sort of positive sign, but I’m more focused on personal issues.

Because what also didn’t happen was assignments of shares to help re-supply cash reserves.

When assignments occur I feel emboldened and anxious to recycle that cash and put it to work making more cash. While emboldened on the one hand, I’m also cautious about dipping deeper into reserves when the assignments are fewer than expected.

They couldn’t possibly have been any fewer than this past week, thanks to about a 400 point drop to end the week.

Maybe this week will be different?

While Citigroup, which shamefully couldn’t pass the regulator’s stress tests just a couple of weeks ago has started the pre-market off on a positive note, with what appear to be genuinely good earnings, it will be a matter of wait and see.

I want the market to be able to prove itself worthy of opening new positions, but I think that if it does, I would be much happier being able to sell calls on existing positions. I would rather generate the week’s income stream in that manner instead of by buying new positions, even if there appear to be some bargains after last week’s indiscriminate and somewhat irrational rise and then fall.

As the market does open it will be interesting to see where the volatility moves and whether there is any enhancement of forward week option premiums. If I had the opportunity to find cover for existing positions my preference would be to go out into forward weeks, but a beggar shouldn’t be a chooser. I would happily take what I could get.

As with past weeks I’ll likely watch during the first hour to see whether the Citigroup bump has any legs, as early optimism has frequently given way to an excuse to sell and close positions often after the first hour of trading.

Today, and you can look at this as a positive or a negative, it took until the final hour to reverse what had been a gain of Janet Yellen proportions. But if you are looking for positive or negative signals, the rebound back in the final 30 minutes after losing almost all of the gain has to be some kind of a positive sign. It’s actually hard to remember the last time anything like that had happened.

Usually these surprises leave you poorer.

Someone was optimistic. Whether that lasts until tomorrow may be questionable, but yu have to start and take a stance somewhere.

For those who believe that late last week’s selling was related to raising money from last year’s capital gains in order to meet tax payments, the expectation would be that markets would begin climbing higher as those money raising sales are completed. Of course, it really has to be new money that drives a market higher. It can’t simply be recycling. So if people had to sell stocks to pay their taxes it’s not too likely that on the day after those taxes are paid that they would suddenly have new funds to infuse into the markets.

If the markets do reverse this quick 4% drop it will simply be because the drop itself had neither rational, technical, nor a fundamental basis. It wasn’t even based on fear or uncertainty, so there’s every bit as much reason for it to return to advancing as there is for it continuing to go lower.

Today it just decided to do both. That’s all.

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 14, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 14, 2014 (9:15 AM)

There was lots of nervousness over the weekend as concerns centered on Russian intentions over eastern Ukraine.

Since that was clearly an identified risk factor during Friday’s trading no one would have blamed traders for really accelerating the selling that was already a follow through to Thursday’s sell-off.

But it didn’t happen that way despite a very large order imbalance that should have driven the market even lower at the close of trading.

I suppose that could be taken as some sort of positive sign, but I’m more focused on personal issues.

Because what also didn’t happen was assignments of shares to help re-supply cash reserves.

When assignments occur I feel emboldened and anxious to recycle that cash and put it to work making more cash. While emboldened on the one hand, I’m also cautious about dipping deeper into reserves when the assignments are fewer than expected.

They couldn’t possibly have been any fewer than this past week, thanks to about a 400 point drop to end the week.

Maybe this week will be different?

While Citigroup, which shamefully couldn’t pass the regulator’s stress tests just a couple of weeks ago has started the pre-market off on a positive note, with what appear to be genuinely good earnings, it will be a matter of wait and see.

I want the market to be able to prove itself worthy of opening new positions, but I think that if it does, I would be much happier being able to sell calls on existing positions. I would rather generate the week’s income stream in that manner instead of by buying new positions, even if there appear to be some bargains after last week’s indiscriminate and somewhat irrational rise and then fall.

As the market does open it will be interesting to see where the volatility moves and whether there is any enhancement of forward week option premiums. If I had the opportunity to find cover for existing positions my preference would be to go out into forward weeks, but a beggar shouldn’t be a chooser. I would happily take what I could get.

As with past weeks I’ll likely watch during the first hour to see whether the Citigroup bump has any legs, as early optimism has frequently given way to an excuse to sell and close positions.

For those who believe that the selling was related to raising money from last year’s capital gains in order to meet tax payments, the expectation would be that markets would begin climbing higher as those money raising sales are completed. Of course, it really has to be new money that drives a market higher. It can’t simply be recycling. So if people had to sell stocks to pay their taxes it’s not too likely that on the day after those taxes are paid that they would suddenly have new funds to infuse into the markets.

If the markets do reverse this quick 4% drop it will simply be because the drop itself had neither rational, technical, nor a fundamental basis. It wasn’t even based on fear or uncertainty, so there’s every bit as much reason for it to return to advancing as there is for it continuing to go lower.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dashboard – April 14 – 18, 2014

 

 

 

 

 

MONDAY:   Early indications show no follow through to late last week, but no bounce back either. My primary goal this week is to raise cash through assignments, sell calls and be better positioned to start the May 2014 cycle, rather than opening too many new positions.

TUESDAY:     Great late recovery yesterday may be the story of the week. That has to inspire some confidence and even more confusion.

WEDNESDAY:  Another impressive previous day’s close, but this time there looks to be early follow through, hopefully enough to bring us closer to rollovers and assignments to round out a diminshed new position week.

THURSDAY:    An early end to the week may get off on a slightly negative note, but after a week of pleasant surprises, anything is possible to end this monthly option cycle.

FRIDAY

 

 



                                                                                                                                           

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak Peek

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Weekend Update – April 13, 2014

Volatility is back!

Barely a month ago there was much talk about rising volatility in the face of a declining market. Those that would tend to use charts to predict the future suggested that the then rise in volatility was the precursor of the correction we had all been expecting.

Now we’re at it again.

A month ago there were clearly identified catalysts that were weighing heavily on the markets. Disappointing economic news from China coupled with the unfolding crisis in Crimea mixed the economic realm with the geo-political one.

However, back then it appeared that the rise in volatility may have been reminiscent of previous smaller “mini-VIX” rises that occurred on a regular basis, nestled between larger rises that also came on a regular basis.

As it turned out, that was precisely the case, as the volatility rise seen at that time quickly gave way and the market did what it has repeatedly done over the past 18 months. It simply recovered from short lived setbacks and went on to new highs.

An extension of the chart presented last month to illustrate the cyclic nature of the “maxi-VIX and mini-VIX” pattern shows that would was a possible “mini-VIX” in the making turned out to be exactly that and as short lived as its predecessors and its rise ended at a level right where previous smaller VIX rises had ended.

Now, the question has evolved into whether the current rise in volatility is part of a developing “maxi-VIX” formation. The timing is right and certainly few would disagree that it has been a long time since we’ve had a downward move that could be classified as a “correction.”

The significance, of course, is that the market tends to go lower as volatility rises. While people may disagree as to whether volatility is predictive in nature or simply a by product of events, it does paint a picture of the health of markets.

The glaring difference between this month’s rise and that of last month is that there are no obvious catalysts, although that would never stop those from offering hypotheses.

The past week saw a 600 point reversal in the DJIA in the latter half of the week. That move was framed in the context of elation tied to an FOMC that appeared to be supportive of continued lower interest rates to the fears that interest rates would rise.

It was a week that saw clear flight to safety before the elation and “risk on” behavior the very next day, which then gave way to universal flight.

Whatever the cause for the abrupt turnaround it did validate the old aphorism that you shouldn’t count your chickens before they’re hatched, as this past week was a rare one in which I had no positions assigned, after having already plotted exactly how I would be spending all of that money that at mid-week I knew would be pouring in from assignments.

While the coming week may have even more of the “bargains” that have been lacking lately, I’m neither as anxious to commit toward their ownership nor do I have as much in my cash reserves as I would like to really capitalize on opportunities.

If a “maxi-VIX” pattern is in the making it would be reasonable to expect even lower prices in the coming weeks. Although this past week was fairly dreadful, mitigated somewhat by hedging positions, the 4.1% decline from the recent high is still far from satisfying the expectations of those awaiting a standard correction. I’ve been waiting for one of those so long that I may also learn the truth of another aphorism and learn to regret what I had been wishing for.

The potential benefit of increasing volatility for the option seller is that premiums are likely to perk up and that may especially become apparent for the longer term options, such as for the standard monthly variety. During a period of uncertainty the use of longer term contracts can help to ride out any near term weakness while paying you to wait.

While the aphorism “there’s no such thing as a free lunch,” may be true, at least the premiums from those option sales offer a bit of a discount.

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

In a week that was fairly indiscriminate in which stock was dragged lower the one that really received my attention was one that I was certain would be assigned on Friday. MetLife (MET) was one of those that fell victim to fears of rising interest rates and fell more sharply than it had risen on the immediately preceding belief that rates would remain low. Whether the elation or the fears were warranted sometimes it is possible to simply have an overly exaggerated reaction and MetLife had them in both directions during the week as it went along for the rides. Any respite in interest rate theories, regardless of what direction, should allow MetLife to show some stability, which in the past has made it an excellent covered option position.

Perhaps it’s just an unintended juxtaposition that would have discussion of the merits of an insurance company precede discussion of Lorillard (LO). Since Lorillard only offers monthly option contracts I’m especially drawn to it during the final week of a monthly cycle or before an ex-dividend date. In this case it’s the former, but it’s appeal goes beyond the time of month. Potentially in play as a take over target die to its reported lead in the e-cigarette area, much of that premium in its price has now been discounted, due to the tangled web of relationships between the various tobacco companies. Instead, Lorillard is simply a cash machine that is seeking to expand its user base, despite denials of that strategy.

Of course, while e-cigarettes may or may not enhance the need for fastidious oral hygiene, the real thing does and while Colgate Palmolive certainly makes products other than toothpaste, as a one time Pediatric Dentist, that’s the one that I can readily associate with Colgate. What I can also associate with shares is its dividend and potential refuge for those seeking safety. It goes ex-dividend this week and offers an attractive premium. The single caveat is that shares are trading near the yearly highs and earnings are reported the following week. However, as with some other positions being considered this week, there is added reason to consider the sale of May 2014 option contracts to secure additional premium and insulate oneself s a little from near term market weakness.

In retail, The Gap (GPS) and L Brands (LB) frequently infuriate me and delight me, respectively.

The Gap is yet another company that I had expected to be assigned this past week. For some reason it continues to provide monthly same store sales statistics and for me, their timing is usually less than fortuitous. However, The Gap always seems to have a way of reversing the disappointments and has been a very reliable covered option trade, despite the histrionics displayed by an investing community that interprets each month’s worth of data as being reflective of the company’s prospects in perpetuity.

L Brands, on the other hand is a company that simply executes among its various brands, although it, too, provides those comparable sales statistics. Down about 8% in the past week in part as a result of lower same store sales, L Brands is a company that I frequently like to consider owning during the final week of a monthly option cycle, as with Lorillard, particularly if its price has moderated. A nice dividend, good option premiums and reliable management is a good combination, especially when the market itself can’t be trusted to act rationally.

Best Buy (BBY), while certainly a volatile stock over the past few years has lately settled into somewhat of a comfort zone, punctuated by flights higher and lower. While I may not want to be holding shares in advance of earnings, that is still 5 weeks away and in the interim there’s not too much reason to believe that it will be disrupted for long from its recent path. After weakness last week it’s price is at the lower end of that range and seems to be offering a good entry point even in a rocky market.

Among those reporting earnings this week are Yahoo (YHOO) and SanDisk (SNDK).

Yahoo has fallen about 15% in the past month and it’s not likely that they will be in a position to blame the winter weather for their quarterly results. Other than the promise of riches from its piece of Ali Baba which will be coming public, it’s hard to know what drives Yahoo forward, just as it’s hard to know whether its CEO, Marissa Mayer, warrants accolades for any initiatives that are increasingly difficult to categorize. A weakening IPO market may disproportionately impact Yahoo share prospects and would certainly detract from Mayer’s scorecard.

With the option market implying an approximate 7% earnings related move in shares, there may be some opportunity in the sale of puts outside of that range, but the opportunities, that is the risk/reward balance would be more enticing if the overall market was not in continued deterioration.

SanDisk, on the other hand is also seeing an implied move of 7%, however, it does offer a slightly improved reward for the risk. Perhaps more importantly, in contrast to Yahoo, its strategic direction is clear. While Yahoo passively rescued itself from oblivion through its Ali Baba stake, SanDisk rescued itself from the oblivion of commoditization through active and creative product development. Since shares also go ex-dividend later in the month, if making this earnings trade through the sale of puts and being faced with assignment, I might consider that possibility, whereas ordinarily I would seek to roll over puts and await a price turnaround and subsequent exit from the position via expiration.

Finally, to me it almost seems ironic that during a week that saw a less than gracious welcome for IPO offerings, one of the most recently memorable disappointing IPOs, that may have signaled a market top comes to mind. Blackstone (BX) reports earnings this week and has been increasingly responsible for this era’s new initial public offerings. This week, for example, La Quinta (LQ) went public again to less than enthusiastic demand. The cynical might suggest that Blackstone’s use of the IPO process for its own properties is an example of opportunism at its very finest and might suggest that a market top is in the vicinity.

To that I would argue that opportunism at its finest is when you use IPO proceeds to completely cash out. While that may not currently be the case, one does have to wonder whether there will be enough dinghies for all of us once we come to realize what Blackstone has in the past so well demonstrated that it is capable of doing.

Meanwhile, as opposed to many earnings related  trades that I would make via the sale of put contracts and prefer to execute only as part of a very short lived strategy, Blackstone is one that I could envision a longer relationship. While in general reluctant to take possession of shares if put to me, Blackstone is one that is far more than a vehicle to exploit excesses in option premiums.

Traditional Stocks: L Brands, Lorillard, MetLife, The Gap

Momentum Stocks: Best Buy

Double Dip Dividend: Colgate Palmolive (ex-div 4/17)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: SanDisk (4/16 PM), Yahoo (4/15 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.