Daily Market Update – May 9, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 9, 2014 (9:00 AM)

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

Today’s possible outcomes include:

 

AssignmentBBY, GPS, TXN, UNH, VZ

Rollover:   GM, SBUX, TXN

Expiration:  EBAY, FDO, LOW

 

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

 

 

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Daily Market Update – May 8, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 8, 2014 (8:45 AM)

Markets go up and markets go down all of the time, so it wasn’t or at least shouldn’t have been terribly surprising that yesterday would have a bounce back following Tuesday’s terrible market that saw a broad retreat.

But despite yesterday’s nice performance it was relatively superficial as the NASDAQ continued its high profile decline, taking with it not only the ones you would call the “usual suspects,” but also the more staid.

Last night was more of the same as further earnings were released and companies like Tesla are showing the strain and will just get added to the growing heap of casualties that are, thus far, taking longer than the usual time to at least start their recovery.

That’s discouraging and may not be something that will stay in isolation. As with most systems under attack, it’s the weakest that are usually the first to fall. Tremendously high beta and outrageous price/earnings are those characteristics that on the one hand send some stocks on a parabolic move higher and on an identical path lower.

But after they’ve fallen, what’s next?

To some degree that depends on the rate of the descent and the rate of the spread. It’s like contagion, except the  opposite.

In a real contagion the more quickly spreading and the more lethal, eventually the more self limiting, as the killer kills off its hosts and loses its ability to spread. But with stocks the quicker the descent the more it is likely to drag others along and feed upon itself. Even the healthy low beta, moderate price/earnings kind of names are then susceptible.

That’s why seeing bounce backs are so important, as is seeing evidence of companies that thrive under the same environment. But if the companies thriving under those kind of environments are restricted to utilities and the P&G’s of the world, that itself is a reflection of walls weakening. While the foundation is critical, most people don’t predicate their decisions on the foundations. It’s what else there is beyond the foundation that attracts or frightens people

What has been generally missing so far during this earnings season is much evidence of thriving companies. The signs of strength that would actually promote either investor enthusiasm or at least reflect real economic growth just aren’t there or aren’t widely noticed.

The last few quarters, at least the past two, have seen earnings that were generally referred to as average or better than average and have been some basis for the market moving even further ahead, although for much of the past two years prior to 2014 there wasn’t much reason required.

On a retail level and on a manufacturing level, not to mention iron and coal, the basic fuels of growth, the basis for believing economic growth was proceeding has been lacking. That didn’t matter in 2012 and 2013 and so far, isn’t terribly important now, either.

What had been conveniently overlooked in those previous quarters has been the increasing and ever wider impact of stock buy backs as the earnings, even if falling, were rising on a per shares basis.

While reporting earnings per share is supposed to make it an apples to apples kind of comparison, that’s just not always the case. Reduce the number of shares in your denominator and by comparison it’s as if you moved on to a new group of uglier friends that now makes yu look better than before.

It’s often said that the shortcoming of technical analysis is that it focuses solely on charts and doesn’t really consider fundamental factors. Likewise, fundamental analysis is faulted for not considering share movement, history and patterns, but they can be further faulted for willingly accepting numbers on their surface and sometimes comparing apples to oranges. To some degree that can’t be helped because the reporting of buy backs isn’t always made on a timely basis and may not coincide very neatly with the reporting periods.  Apple, for example, just released information regarding its buy backs as of February 2014, while its earnings were for the period ending in March.

Maybe the markets are coming to this kind of realization. You can’t blame tax selling, end of the year profit taking, seasonality,  or the weather anymore.

 

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Daily Market Update – May 7, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 7, 2014 (Close)

Yesterday was just an absolutely brutal day for the market and it continued into the after-hours trading.

Some stocks, like YELP, which reported nice earnings last week and went higher, despite being among those ultra-high beta momentum stocks just plunged yesterday, for no reason of its own, going down about 14%.

YELP  was one of the personal trades that I made recently that wasn’t part of the recommended list of trades because the risk seemed a little inappropriate, but that worked out for a very quick gain.

In hindsight I often think that such trades should have been included as part of the Trading Alerts.

But YELP’s subsequent drop That actually paled in comparison to Twitter, which didn’t likely set off the bad day, but was bad enough to distort most everything, as it went down about 18% on incredible volume.

Then again, trades like Twitter make me glad, in hindsight, that some trades aren’t part of the recommended list of trades.

Twitter was joined by the likes of GNC (down 11.3%), FireEye (down  16.5%), Zuillily (down 20.5%) and Whole Foods, which went down 13.8% and appears to be headed even lower in the pre-open.

Among the names above, not all are high beta, yet they were also horribly punished.

In the case of Whole Foods, it’s a little hard to understand. Months ago I write about the drop Whole Foods had taken as it announced some lower same store sales that were caused by bad weather. At that time I wrote that I hoped that it wouldn’t be doubly punished when earnings were released.

It was.

This morning, after yesterday’s terrible all around showing, which was made even more intolerable because it came on a Tuesday and we had grown accustomed to  strong market performances on Tuesdays, appears to be headed mildly higher.

But we’ll see.

The action is Twitter was bad from the beginning and I was surprised. I really hadn’t expected so much selling and so much price pressure, particularly since shares had already fallen quite a bit and insiders said they wouldn’t be selling. It reminded of Facebook when it faced its own lock-up expiration. The scenario was identical. Shares had fallen from their $38 IPO to $21 right before the expiration date. They eventually fell to about $18, but the selling was fairly muted and not on explosive volume. Lots of Facebook insiders likely believed that shares were valued too cheaply and they may have known that there were some good initiatives and news to come.

Twitter, on the other hand, may be populated by insiders who don’t have the same confidence.

But the real blow came when Mark Mahaney, a respected analyst, who was fired from Citigroup a few years ago for sharing non-public information and who came to  a settlement with Massachusetts regulators, suggested that perhaps Twitter insiders who said they wouldn’t sell shares at the expiration did actually sell shares.

He wasn’t questioned on that comment and offered no additional information.

But shares accelerated their decline after those comments.

Even if I hadn’t added to my short put positions I would have thought that to have been a reckless thing to say, unless there was personal gain to be had.

Today is likely to be a slow day on the personal front and spent hoping to see some strength re-developing in the market and in individual positions that may have been treated far too harshly.

The hopes came true, but there was scant opportunity to sell new calls today. So there’s every reason to keep hoping tomorrow and Friday and to urge all of your friends to shop at Whole Foods and then Tweet out their experiences.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 7, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 7, 2014 (8:30 AM)

Yesterday was just an absolutely brutal day for the market and it continued into the after-hours trading.

Some stocks, like YELP, which reported nice earnings last week and went higher, despite being among those ultra-high beta momentum stocks just plunged yesterday, for no reason of its own, going down about 14%.

YELP  was one of the personal trades that I made recently that wasn’t part of the recommended list of trades because the risk seemed a little inappropriate, but that worked out for a very quick gain.

In hindsight I often think that such trades should have been included as part of the Trading Alerts.

But YELP’s subsequent drop That actually paled in comparison to Twitter, which didn’t likely set off the bad day, but was bad enough to distort most everything, as it went down about 18% on incredible volume.

Then again, trades like Twitter make me glad, in hindsight, that some trades aren’t part of the recommended list of trades.

Twitter was joined by the likes of GNC (down 11.3%), FireEye (down  16.5%), Zuillily (down 20.5%) and Whole Foods, which went down 13.8% and appears to be headed even lower in the pre-open.

Among the names above, not all are high beta, yet they were also horribly punished.

In the case of Whole Foods, it’s a little hard to understand. Months ago I write about the drop Whole Foods had taken as it announced some lower same store sales that were caused by bad weather. At that time I wrote that I hoped that it wouldn’t be doubly punished when earnings were released.

It was.

This morning, after yesterday’s terrible all around showing, which was made even more intolerable because it came on a Tuesday and we had grown accustomed to  strong market performances on Tuesdays, appears to be headed mildly higher.

But we’ll see.

The action is Twitter was bad from the beginning and I was surprised. I really hadn’t expected so much selling and so much price pressure, particularly since shares had already fallen quite a bit and insiders said they wouldn’t be selling. It reminded of Facebook when it faced its own lock-up expiration. The scenario was identical. Shares had fallen from their $38 IPO to $21 right before the expiration date. They eventually fell to about $18, but the selling was fairly muted and not on explosive volume. Lots of Facebook insiders likely believed that shares were valued too cheaply and they may have known that there were some good initiatives and news to come.

Twitter, on the other hand, may be populated by insiders who don’t have the same confidence.

But the real blow came when Mark Mahaney, a respected analyst, who was fired from Citigroup a few years ago for sharing non-public information and who came to  a settlement with Massachusetts regulators, suggested that perhaps Twitter insiders who said they wouldn’t sell shares at the expiration did actually sell shares.

He wasn’t questioned on that comment and offered no additional information.

But shares accelerated their decline after those comments.

Even if I hadn’t added to my short put positions I would have thought that to have been a reckless thing to say, unless there was personal gain to be had.

Today is likely to be a slow day on the personal front and spent hoping to see some strength re-developing in the market and in individual positions that may have been treated far too harshly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 6, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 6, 2014 (Close)

Yesterday saw an impressive turnaround following a nearly 130 point drop. But it doesn’t look as if today will have much in the way of follow-through. As it was, there wasn’t much reason for the fall, other than to play “follow the leader,” having taken Europe’s cue. Likewise, there wasn’t too much reason to turn things back around, either, other than the closure of the European markets.

Given the pattern of recent Tuedays, you would have to excuse anyone who thought that today would be a day to buy stocks or at least watch the existing ones go higher and higher.

Not so.

The biggest story of the week is likely to be today’s lock-up expiration of Twitter and some kind of celebration of the fourth anniversary of what is known as the “Flash Crash.”

It didn’t take much of  crystal ball to have that figured out, but it did take one to see just how big Twitter’s drop would be. It was well beyond what anyone imagined, especially since none of the big insiders said they were going to be sellers of shares, but more on that later.

While Twitter shares are pointing sharply lower in the pre-trading market, if there’s any remote resemblance to the case of Facebook, as it faced its first big lock-up expiration, it would mark a trading low and an opportunity to start accumulating shares. Facebook fell about 10% on that lock-up expiration day, but Twitter ended up falling almost 18%.

That’s tough to make back except by a little at a time.

That kind of drop made it even more difficult to rollover $43.50 puts that were done for my personal trading, but I thought it might open open open forward opportunities. By the time the day was done I had sold two new Facebook put lots for my personal trading and by the end of the day had to roll them over to the following week,as the selling just kept going on and on.

While shares were weak to begin with, they really accelerated after RBS analyst, Mark Mahaney, suggested that there was selling by insiders who said they wouldn’t sell. He wasn’t questioned about that comment and he offered nothing else.

This is the same Mark Mahaney who was fired by Citigroup for provoding non-public information when he shouldn’t and with whom a settlement was reached with the COmmonwealth of Massachusetts regarding such activities related to Facebook and Google.

And now we have Twitter.

Beyond Twitter, it’s still amazing that no one can explain what happened that day in May when I was headed to the garden store with my wife driving. Even if being able to use more than 140 spaces to do so, still no one can explain. While listening in disbelief to the radio I wanted to grab the steering wheel from her and car jack my own car so I could get back home.

But instead, she got peonies, while I got hosed.

That was a day that created lots of trust in the system. The fact that they can’t explain what had happened and initially tried blaming it on a “fat finger,” shouldn’t leave too many people with an abiding sense of security.

Yet, we go on, because it’s still the best place to be, even with lots of hiccoughs and lots of irrational behaviors. Imagine that if the “smart money” acts the way it does, just how bizarre must be the behavior of you and I.

After a fairly busy day yesterday, I’m not expecting many more new purchases for the week, although looking at some pre-market drops in specific stocks, like AIG and Holly Frontier,  both earnings related, I get interested in saying hello to some old friends.

But lately some of these earnings related drops have been lasting a little longer than usual and aren’t the same kind of slam-dunk purchases as they may have been a year ago. In a market that went only higher even disappointments were quickly forgiven.  That’s just not as certain in 2014.

So while the money is there, I may be a little more discerning and maybe wait for even more selling.

With enough new positions to probably keep me satisfied for the week attention then gets diverted to what has been increasingly important. That is to make existing revenue streams continue through rollover and more importantly get new coverage on existing positions.

The weakness yesterday, even with the turnaround, didn’t do very much to help achieve that latter goal and this morning’s preliminary weakness isn’t doing much, either.

Hopefully the market will just do what it has been so good at doing in the past and just move higher, with or without a catalysts. Unfortunately, there really don’t appear to be any catalysts on the horizon that might send shares higher, but there are enough things on the near term horizon that could introduce some nervousness into the equation.

Today did nothing to help.

While I always have at least one antennae up to  figure out what curve balls may lie ahead the preponderance of uncertainty isn’t really overwhelming. Especially since it all seems so obvious and is on everyone’s radar.

Those just seem to be good times to do more than dip a toe in.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 6, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 6, 2014 (9:30 AM)

Yesterday saw an impressive turnaround following a nearly 130 point drop. But it doesn’t look as if today will have much in the way of follow-through. As it was, there wasn’t much reason for the fall, other than to play “follow the leader,” having taken Europe’s cue. Likewise, there wasn’t too much reason to turn things back around, either, other than the closure of the European markets.

The biggest story of the week is likely to be today’s lock-up expiration of Twitter and some kind of celebration of the fourth anniversary of what is known as the “Flash Crash.”

While Twitter shares are pointing sharply lower in the pre-trading market, if there’s any remote resemblance to the case of Facebook, as it faced its first big lock-up expiration, it will mark a trading low and an opportunity to start accumulating shares.

That may or may not help me to rollover some existing puts that were done for my personal trading, but it may open open forward opportunities.

Beyond Twitter, it’s still amazing that no one can explain what happened that day in May when I was headed to the garden store with my wife driving. Even if being able to use more than 140 spaces to do so, still no one can explain. While listening in disbelief to the radio I wanted to grab the steering wheel from her and car jack my own car so I could get back home.

But instead, she got peonies, while I got hosed.

That was a day that created lots of trust in the system. The fact that they can’t explain what had happened and initially tried blaming it on a “fat finger,” shouldn’t leave too many people with an abiding sense of security.

Yet, we go on, because it’s still the best place to be, even with lots of hiccoughs and lots of irrational behaviors. Imagine that if the “smart money” acts the way it does, just how bizarre must be the behavior of you and I.

After a fairly busy day yesterday, I’m not expecting many more new purchases for the week, although looking at some pre-market drops in specific stocks, like AIG and Holly Frontier,  both earnings related, I get interested in saying hello to some old friends.

But lately some of these earnings related drops have been lasting a little longer than usual and aren’t the same kind of slam-dunk purchases as they may have been a year ago. In a market that went only higher even disappointments were quickly forgiven.  That’s just not as certain in 2014.

So while the money is there, I may be a little more discerning and maybe wait for even more selling.

With enough new positions to probably keep me satisfied for the week attention then gets diverted to what has been increasingly important. That is to make existing revenue streams continue through rollover and more importantly get new coverage on existing positions.

The weakness yesterday, even with the turnaround, didn’t do very much to help achieve that latter goal and this morning’s preliminary weakness isn’t doing much, either.

Hopefully the market will just do what it has been so good at doing in the past and just move higher, with or without a catalysts. Unfortunately, there really don’t appear to be any catalysts on the horizon that might send shares higher, but there are enough things on the near term horizon that could introduce some nervousness into the equation.

While I always have at least one antennae up to  figure out what curve balls may lie ahead the preponderance of uncertainty isn’t really overwhelming. Especially since it all seems so obvious and is on everyone’s radar.

Those just seem to be good times to do more than dip a toe in.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 5, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 5, 2014 (Close)

I like getting the week off to a start with cash in reserve, especially when the market looks as if it may be opening up on the weak side.

What I don’t like is one of those subtle areas of discrimination that don’t allow for a level playing field.

I’m not referring to this LA Clipper and Donald Sterling story, but instead to the discrimination that allows an option contract holder the opportunity until after the market closes to elect not to participate in automatic assignment.

In this case it was JP Morgan, which closed at $55.58 and was destined for assignment at $55.50. At least that’s what any normal person would have expected to be the case.

That is until it announced some adverse news regarding forward revenues and risk in Russia.

While normally shares closing a penny or more above the strike price are automatically assigned, that’s really not accurate. Contract holders have the right to tell their brokerages not to assign shares on their behalf. The automatic assignment is referred to as “exercise by exception.” They can request an exception to that exception.

Sometimes they make that decision because they just don’t have the money to pay for the shares. Other times they just think that there’s something better they can do with their money and leverage it, to boot.

The cynic in me believes that some knew of what kind of news was to come.

When JP Morgan shares then dropped after hours to about $55 at first I felt relieved, but then I realized it’s not a fair world.

What’s galling is that brokerages have a different time cut-off for option contract holders to make that automatic assignment decision. The cut-off is after the closing bell, so that they can react to news that you can’t.

This was the second time that’s happened to me.

Once it resulted in shares being assigned that I expected to still be with me on Monday and this time it resulted in shares going unassigned.

The first time resulted in missing out on nice after hour gains and this time taking on the losses that I expected someone else would carry as a burden.

At some point I’ll get over it, especially if I can put the cash from those that were rightfully assigned to good use.

With cash up to 35%, which is down a couple of percentage points after finding JP Morgan still in my account, I’m willing to get down to about 20% this week.

Again, with a fair number of positions set to expire this week, I may instead look at next week, which happens to be the end of the May 2014 cycle for my new expirations.

In the meantime,as the market has opened with a triple digit loss, it’s not necessarily a time to just immediately jump in, even with the cash in hand. Barely a couple of hours later, though, and with no reason to have expected as such, that entire loss was reversed.

I had plan on sitting and watching a bit, listening for news and looking for any signs of stability. The news never came, but the stability did as this was one of the busiest trading Mondays I’ve had for a while It almost seemed like the old days.

Still, I was bothered by JP Morgan and for a while I believed that it might end up becoming the first trade of the day but its premium didn’t really reflect much in the way of risk that usually comes with any kind of large, especially unexpected movement in price. 

Making that purchase would have made me happy if the shares were replacement for the assigned ones, but I suppose I could get some satisfaction by simply booking a profit on the new shares and getting an opportunity to sell options on the old and unwanted ones. But that happiness, too, was taken away from me.

It’s beginning to sound like something out of a soap opera.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 5, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 5, 2014 (9:45 AM)

I like getting the week off to a start with cash in reserve, especially when the market looks as if it may be opening up on the weak side.

What I don’t like is one of those subtle areas of discrimination that don’t allow for a level playing field.

I’m not referring to this LA Clipper and Donald Sterling story, but instead to the discrimination that allows an option contract holder the opportunity until after the market closes to elect not to participate in automatic assignment.

In this case it was JP Morgan, which closed at $55.58 and was destined for assignment at $55.50. t least that’s what any normal person would have expected to be the case.

That is until it announced some adverse news regarding forward revenues and risk in Russia.

While normally shares closing a penny or more above the strike price are automatically assigned, that’s really not accurate. Contract holders have the right to tell their brokerages not to assign shares on their behalf. The automatic assignment is referred to as “exercise by exception.” They can request an exception to that exception.

Sometimes they make that decsion because they just don’t have the money to pay for the shares. Other times they just think that there’s something better they can do with their money and leverage it, to boot.

When JP Morgan shares then dropped after hours to about $55 at first I felt relieved, but then I realized it’s not a fair world.

What’s galling is that brokerages have a different time cut-off for option contract holders to make that automatic assignment decision. The cut-off is after the closing bell, so that they can react to news that you can’t.

This was the second time that’s happened to me.

Once it resulted in shares being assigned that I expected to still be with me on Monday and this time it resulted in shares going unassigned.

The first time resulted in missing out on nice after hour gains and this time taking on the losses that I expected someone else would carry as a burden.

At some point I’ll get over it, especially if I can put the cash from those that were rightfully assigned to good use.

With cash up to 35%, which is down a couple of percentage points after finding JP Morgan still in my account, I’m willing to get down to about 20% this week.

Again, with a fair number of positions set to expire this week, I may instead look at next week, which happens to be the end of the May 2014 cycle for my new expirations.

In the meantime,as the market has opened with a triple digit loss, it’s not necessarily a time to just immediately jump in, even with the cash in hand,

I plan on sitting and watching a bit, listening for news and looking for any signs of stability.

What bothers me, watching JP Morgan this morning, is that it may be the likely first trade of the week.

That would have made me happy if the shares were replacement for the assigned ones, but I suppose I could get some satisfaction by simply booking a profit on the new shares and getting an opportunity to sell options on the old and unwanted ones.

It’s beginning to sound like something out of a soap opera.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Twitter Fatigue

I’ve grown tired of Twitter (TWTR).

That may be a purely defensive position as I’ve noticed that my limited number of Twitter followers may, in fact, be more tired of me and I just wanted to be ahead of that curve. It’s probably no coincidence that my follower numbers increase the less I tweet and those tweets have now come to a crawl and not because I feel a need to be original nor have run out of anything to say.

After a couple of years of trying to “promote” myself, a sense of disinterest has set in and people like me may be the problem that Twitter is facing regarding its growth prospects. Not only does Twitter have to convince new people to join, understand the interface and actually use it, but they also have to convince existng users to stay and actively participate. Using Twitter as I now predominantly do as a “news feed” as Herb Greenberg suggests may have utility for the user but adds little to their bottom line. 

Like others, I may find the occasional advance reporting of an errant helicopter encircling what every local knew to be an Al-Qaeda compound, but I didn’t try to engage that tweeter and really don’t recall much in the way of anyone trying to capitalize on all of those re-tweets or “favorites.” Also, as with reports of the floor of the New York Stock Exchange being under three feet of water, sometimes that breaking news just has a way of getting broken. While Twitter can be lauded for getting breaking news out before the professionals can get mobilized it can also be criticized for its lack of oversight of those who might be prone to be reckless.

Like so many who use Twitter, I do so through some interface other than the web site. Unless my experiences are some kind of aberration, I just don’t see those revenue producing “promoted” Tweets that are there to pay the bills, yet I and millions of others get to promote themselves ad infinitum. For those that follow huge numbers of others, even having those promoted tweets appear can see them easily getting lost in the volume of their stream.

To its credit, Twitter has opened up some really nice opportunities to engage and even meet some people that I would have never encountered otherwise. It is a perfectly egalitarian society that can offer a real sense of ego inflation not only on the basis of follower numbers but by reciprocal engagement by celebrities of various stature. That kind of periodic engagement can be the Pavlovian reward that may keep people interested and actively using the product in hopes of those occasional rewards.

While tiring of the actual product, what I’m not  tired of is the investing opportunity that its beleaguered shares have offered and, I believe, will continue to offer. For those who recall Facebook (FB) at a similar stage of its public life as it readied itself for an expected onslaught of selling prior to a major stock lock-up expiration, the opportunity to take a contrary position to the crowd is compelling. In the case of the initial Facebook lock-up expiration, sometimes the crowd is vociferous, emotional and clings to the certainty of their opinion on their way to being very wrong.

I’ve found some delight in selling puts on shares well prior to Tuesday’s earnings, occasionally seeing them expire and occasionally having to roll them over to a forward contract date, because the last thing I want to do is to own shares, although I do want to continue collecting premiums. I know that the conventional wisdom is that you shouldn’t sell puts on a stock that you wouldn’t be comfortable owning, but I have a hard time justifying ownership, especially as my serial sale of puts has been during a period that has seen the out of the money strike levels utilized fall in a straight line from $56 to $33 and, if the crowd is correct, will drop even lower next week, as May 6th, the lock-up expiration date approaches.

Over the past 16 weeks I have sold puts on shares of Twitter on 10 occasions, even as share value sunk lower and lower. These days it seems that I make some sort of Twitter trade more often than some sort of tweet, which pleases both my followers and banker. In general I start by looking for a situation in which there exists a strike level below the lower range defined by the Implied Volatility that wll return my ROI objective, which is 1% to start off the process using a weekly option. It’s not a very high ROI, but like so many things, you try to make it up in volume. 

The cumulative results of those trades has been an ROI of 11.6% with a remaining potential liability, of $2.xx based on Thursday’s closing price. That compares to a return of 2.5% for the S&P 500 for the observation period beginning in January 2014. If the entire liability is realized, for example if the remaining open position was closed the ROI would be reduced to 7.9%

On a side note, while I don’t like to use margin other than to prevent free riding violations, selling puts in a margin account that is otherwise fully invested, is a great way to extend the reach of your assets without incurring margin interest costs. Those only accrue if you are actually assigned shares and not if you simply sell puts, which only reduces the amount available to you for use, but doesn’t represent actual borrowing. I look at it as “Portfolio Helper,” but without the calories.

With shares of Twitter having fallen to post-IPO lows following its recent earnings report and with some additional nervousness related to the increased share float next week, I believe that there is continued opportunity to capitalize on the pessimism, through the continued sale of out of the money put options. With an implied volatility of 7.6% based upon premiums for the May 9, 2014 contract, one can still derive an ROI of 1% for the week if shares close above $35.50, which would represent a 9.2% drop in price, considerably in excess of what the option market is anticipating.

If the loss is greater, then the process of attempting to roll the contract over to a new date and perhaps even a lower strike level is begun and continued until it’s eventual expration which typically occurs when the price descent has come to its end. Unless shares are destined for some kind of death spiral at some point what has already been a sustained drop lower will come to its end, as will the series of trades.

While the argument may be made that the gains could have been greater by simply shorting Twitter shares, doing so requires a downward move, whereas selling puts may profit regardless of the direction of the price move. What matters is size and not vector. Additionally, other than commission expense, there is no associated interest expense as would be incurred in carrying a short position in shares that can become a burden with a longer time position.

Not a strategy for everybody and certainly one that has its own risk, but the initial use of well out of the money strike levels to achieve a defined ROI goal that’s not too greedy can be a reasonable way to generate returns that you might be proud to tweet about if only there was someone to acknowledge its receipt.

Daily Market Update – May 2, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 2, 2014 (9>00 AM)

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

 

Today’s possible outcomes include:

 

Assignments:  AIG, BBY, CMCSA, DOW, MOS, PM

 

Rollovers:  GM, GPS, JPM, KSS, UNH

 

ExpirationsBX, COH, FDO, LOW

 

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

 

 

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 1, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 1, 2014 (Close)

With only the Employment Situation Report left to go for the week, this was a relatively busy one on the news front compared to recent weeks and even months.

The market’s gains for the week are already enough for a really good week and there are still two days to go, including that one hurdle. Knowing that the remaining hurdle hasn’t been much of a hurdle puts focus on today as being an important one for the remainder of the week.

Today didn’t do very much to get us well past the finish line as the market just bided time all through the session, alternating between new record highs and retreats from those highs, but certainly not related to any kind of program generated activity.

It was all just aimless.

While already having some new hedge positions opened for the week I would have been very happy seeing additional ones join them, particularly as it was another slow week as far as opening new positions goes and those are the usual source of income flow for each week. Of course, then there’s always the hope to see some combination of rollovers and assignments to round out the income stream and create the seeds for the coming week.

I’ve learned over the years, especially after an FOMC Wednesday that left me looking to be in good position to end the week, not to assume or expect that will be the way it all ends.

If I had been superstitious I would have made some comment about jinxing things, but some things are just better left unsaid.

The morning’s pre-trades were pointing to a lackluster kind of open and that would certainly be acceptable if that was the tone for the rest of the week. Anything would be better than the kind of sell-off that ended last week.

However, since you never know and since tomorrow has the potential to have some volatility due to the data release, whatever opportunities appear to pop up today for rollovers may end up being done today rather than taking chances with an unpredictable report or more likely, an unpredictable reaction from the market.

While the DJIA did set a new record in the closing seconds of trading, the S&P 500 is within easy reach of doing the same, perhaps being the equivalent of another 50 Dow points away from its top.

The past two years has shown that as the market approaches a new record it doesn’t shy away. It does more than just test the level, as technicians would put it. It tends to go through and usually does so without fanfare. As opposed to those kinds of records in the past when the market would make a forceful statement and surge past those technical resistance points, these days it just shrugs as it passes and simply moves higher.

That may be why we don’t see much in the way of corrections. There isn’t much in the way of gap moves higher. Such slow and steady for the most part.

That’s not a bad way to go, whether with individual stocks or markets.

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – May 1, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 1, 2014 (9:15 AM)

With only the Employment Situation Report left to go for the week, this was a relatively busy one on the news front compared to recent weeks and even months.

The market’s gains for the week are already enough for a really good week and there are still two days to go, including that one hurdle. Knowing that the remaining hurdle hasn’t been much of a hurdle puts focus on today as being an important one for the remainder of the week.

While already having some new hedge positions opened for the week I would be very happy seeing additional ones join them, particularly as it was another slow week as far as opening new positions goes and those are the usual source of income flow for each week. Of course, then there’s always the hope to see some combination of rollovers and assignments to round out the income stream and create the seeds for the coming week.

I’ve learned over the years, especially after an FOMC Wednesday that left me looking to be in good position to end the week, not to assume or expect that will be the way it all ends.

If I had been superstitious I would have made some comment about jinxing things, but some things are just better left unsaid.

The morning’s pre-trades are pointing to a lackluster kind of open and that would certainly be acceptable if that was the tone for the rest of the week.

However, since you never know and since tomorrow has the potential to have some volatility due to the data release, whatever opportunities appear to pop up today for rollovers may end up being done today rather than taking chances with an unpredictable report or more likely, an unpredictable reaction from the market.

While the DJIA did set a new record in the closing seconds of trading, the S&P 500 is within easy reach of doing the same, perhaps being the equivalent of another 50 Dow points away from its top.

The past two years has shown that as the market approaches a new record it doesn’t shy away. It does more than just test the level, as technicians would put it. It tends to go through and usually does so without fanfare. As opposed to those kinds of records in the past when the market would make a forceful statement and surge past those technical resistance points, these days it just shrugs as it passes and simply moves higher.

That may be why we don’t see much in the way of corrections. There isn’t much in the way of gap moves higher. Such slow and steady for the most part.

That’s not a bad way to go, whether with individual stocks or markets.

 

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – April 30, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 30, 2014 (Close)

A bad first quarter GDP and mediocre earnings were the news  items to open the morning that would  have its crescendo a few hours later when the FOMC announcement was to be made.

As it would turn out , that crescendo was pretty muted.

While the announcement itself wasn’t too likely to have much in the way of new news it was likely to be interpreted by traders through the lens of this morning’s GDP statistic, with those wondering whether a slowing GDP will be a reason for the Federal Reserve to slow down its tapering, battling with those who believed the GDP number simply reflected awful weather and nothing systemic.

Those are usually the battles that are best watched from the sidelines, but since today is a Wednesday that’s already the default position. There has been very little rational basis behind the reactions following these FOMC releases lately, so default isn’t a bad way to go, otherwise you can’t expect anything other than even odds.

Instead, the battle itself came to a complete draw as there was barely a peep from anyone, not even much in the way of the usual knee jerk reaction that has become so common and laughable.

With new weekly options appearing tomorrow, based on the experience of the past couple of weeks I may again look for opportunity to execute rollovers on Thursday, rather than waiting until Friday. Hopefully today will be a positive kind of day although the pre-open is looking very non-committal, as that’s usually the case in advance of the afternoon announcement.

In last week’s case rolling over positions on Thursday was really serendipitous, as it avoided the impact of the market plunge on Friday, that I never would have otherwise expected. No matter how you dissect things, it never hurts to have luck on your side.

With lots of positions set to expire this week and a fair number looking as if they are in a position to be assigned, I would love to see that be the case, but not only is the challenge of the FOMC ahead, but also Friday’s Employment Situation Report. I would very much like to see cash reserves increased after a few weeks of drawing down reserves, although this week was one of conservation.

Having cash makes it unnecessary to be defensive.

While the Employment Situation Report tends to be a positive trading day, last month served as an exception to that rule, as the day snatched defeat from victory, with a mid-day sell-off after a nice opening gain. That might alert people to the possibility that a defensive position may not be altogether ridiculous, given some of the challenged faced this week and the remaining potential for international chaos.

In the meantime there continues to be an unraveling of the more speculative corner of the market and any rational person would have to be wondering whether that’s just an early warning signal, as it has been just that in the past. With more earnings yet to go there could easily be more of that kind of negative news coming to discourage people and create selling pressure.

Still, you can’t overlook the fact that the market is within striking distance of its all time highs.and as the day was winding to its close all eyes were on the DJIA which was just a few points away from that high point.

Again. The market just keeps doing that, despite all of the times that most everyone believed that it was finally ready to take a break.

Talk about mixed messages.

  

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – April 30, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 30, 2014 (9:15 AM)

A bad first quarter GDP and mediocre earnings are the news to open the morning that will have its crescendo a few hours later when the FOMC announcement is made.

While the announcement itself isn’t too likely to have much in the way of new news it will probably be interpreted by traders through the lens of this morning’s GDP statistic, with those wondering whether a slowing GDP will be a reason for the Federal Reserve to slow down its tapering, battling with those who believe the GDP number simply reflected awful weather and nothing systemic.

Those are usually the battles that are best watched from the sidelines, but since today is a Wednesday that’s already the default position. There has been very little rational basis behind the reactions following these FOMC releases lately, so default isn’t a bad way to go, otherwise you can’t expect anything other than even odds.

With new weekly options appearing tomorrow, based on the experience of the past couple of weeks I may again look for opportunity to execute rollovers on Thursday, rather than waiting until Friday. Hopefully today will be a positive kind of day although the pre-open is looking very non-committal, as that’s usually the case in advance of the afternoon announcement.

In last week’s case rolling over positions on Thursday was really serendipitous, as it avoided the impact of the market plunge on Friday, that I never would have otherwise expected. No matter how you dissect things, it never hurts to have luck on your side.

With lots of positions set to expire this week and a fair number looking as if they are in a position to be assigned, I would love to see that be the case, but not only is the challenge of the FOMC ahead, but also Friday’s Employment Situation Report. I would very much like to see cash reserves increased after a few weeks of drawing down reserves, although this week was one of conservation.

Having cash makes it unnecessary to be defensive.

While the Employment Situation Report tends to be a positive trading day, last month served as an exception to that rule, as the day snatched defeat from victory, with a mid-day sell-off after a nice opening gain. That might alert people to the possibility that a defensive position may not be altogether ridiculous, given some of the challenged faced this week and the remaining potential for international chaos.

In the meantime there continues to be an unraveling of the more speculative corner of the market and any rational person would have to be wondering whether that’s just an early warning signal, as it has been just that in the past. With more earnings yet to go there could easily be more of that kind of negative news coming to discourage people and create selling pressure.

Still, you can’t overlook the fact that the market is within striking distance of its all time highs.

Again. The market just keeps doing that, despite all of the times that most everyone believes that it is finally ready to take a break.

Talk about mixed messages.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

  

Daily Market Update – April 29, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 29, 2014 (Close)

Investing should be easy this week.

After all it’s an Employment Situation Report Week that also happens to have a Tuesday in it.When the morning started I thought this week may be an interesting one.

While the recent string of Tuesdays looks as if it will be getting off on a positive note, the Employment Situation Report string was broken last month by a mid-day strong reversal, but the trend still remains, as for nearly the past 2 years both the week of the report and the actual day have been significantly more likely to end up on the positive side.

What more can you ask?

Well, you could have asked for a triple digit gain or at least something close.

While this morning was looking to continue some of the very impressive rebound from yesterday’s final hour I’m not fully ready to follow those odds of history repeating itself. On the other hand, when I see a company like Coach, which has been a prisoner of history and pattern, once again take a sharp dive when reporting earnings, I am prone to wanting to follow that pattern again. That pattern has been a fairly good formula to follow, although it has required some patience before jumping in, so even that trade isn’t too likely today.

Of course, those were my thought in the morning before being adequately caffeinated. Staring at the Coach 2 year chart made it difficult to resist waiting, although sometimes it’s just best to ignore those urges.

Yesterday’s rebound really was impressive, although it’s not the first such to have occurred over the past couple of weeks. Normally, those kind of rebounds carry with them a very bullish kind of message, but those messages have become obscured and haven’t really found themselves to be accurate predictors of the market’s direction.

That direction has been equally obscure of late and market health has really been called into question as the NASDAQ, and especially the greatest of the “Momentum” stocks have come under attack.

Just as those had been sure things during their climbs higher, most every sure thing sees its time come to an end. In the case of these kind of high fliers it gets a little unnerving when the word “bubble” starts being tossed around with such great frequency.

Generally, the more that climb onto the bandwagon the more sense it makes to just walk, the bubble thing is often very prescient, because it’s just not talk, but it’s also recognition of a pattern. That is the sudden reversal of fortunes in stock moves among the faddiest of stocks and the size of those movements.

As with many stocks that see reversals, such as Coach, there’s enough of a history to suggest that shares will recover in some short time frame, or at least trade in a stable fashion at a new lower level. It’s usually not correct to refer to such stocks as value traps, because their value tends to return or be re-established.

But in the case of these high fliers, there is no such individual history. Yet people believe that when they experience large drops it’s a chance to get in at a reasonable price.

History shows that many of these don’t recover and when taken in their totality, they may be a harbinger for things to come in the broader market.

As I mentioned yesterday, this will be an interesting week.

Yesterday was an appropriate start for that kind of a week and there’s more to come as earnings start coming our way.

Stay tuned and stay patient.