Tuesday, June 17, 2008

130/30 trading fund JFT

The 130/30 strategy involves looking for the weakest 30% of stocks, shorting them, and taking that money to invest in the other 70%. A fund that does this is 130% long, 30% short. This strategy is used by some hedge funds (Marketwatch article). For the little guy that want this kind of play, JFT is a new exchange traded fund. The caveat is that it is low volume, so spreads may be high and the expense ratio is 0.95% per year.

Elsewhere, the stock market fizzles again today. The stock market almanac indicates weakness for the rest of June, and July tends to be a poor month for bulls as well.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Nusbaum: China close to a buy

Roger The Shanghai Composite has gone on another run down and closed today at 2868 down 53% from the peak last fall and down 45% YTD.

I've disclosed being out for a while now with the intention of going back in and I think the time for me to go back in is quite soon.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Sell DE (buy back short puts)

Sell DE via buying back short Jun 72.5 puts

Floods in the Midwest may mean bad news for Deere tractor sales. Even though my puts are still well out of the money, I am taking my loss while it is are still small. Another down day like today and the loss starts to loom larger.

It's been a yucky market to be sure. It is disappointing to see the entire 150 point rally given back.

Positions:
Long EWZ, IWM, SPY
Short TSL, SHLD

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Buy DE (sell puts)

Buy DE via selling the Jun 72.5 puts

Deere has a $7 billion stock buy back fund, so the odds of a steep drop are extremely low, even lower than the theoretical 2.6% odds given by the ThinkorSwim analyzer. (ThinkorSwim is my broker and has their own trading software that includes a probability analyzer.)

Positions, all hedged, all June expiration
Long DE, EWZ, IWM, SPY
Short SHLD, TSL

Buy SPY (sell puts)

Buy SPY via selling the Jun 127 puts
Stock market weak after Bernanke talks about inflation. Foreign stocks, especially China tumble on fiscal tightening.

Positions all hedged, all out of the money, expiration Friday is nine days out
long EWZ, IWM, SPY
short SHLD, TSL

Monday, June 09, 2008

Futia on Magazine covers

Carl Futia mentions magazine covers in his blog (link) June 9th entry if you are reading this later.

Magazine covers can be a good sentiment indicator. The two covers are about oil, so it may be more bearish on oil, than bullish on stocks. When the stock market bear shows up on the cover, that is a stronger stock market indicator.

Saturday, June 07, 2008

A dozen stocks: 50/200 dma

I review some charts looking for stocks above the 200 day moving average, and dipping to or one day below the 50 dma. Here are a dozen tickers that I found worth a closer look:
NKE CMI CHRW PCLN ITU SCHW
AZO APA CNI XLB FXM RIO

Keep in mind, that this is relative small list of stocks that I am looking at, so there would be many more symbols if running a similar screen on all listed stocks.

For my favored strategy of selling puts out of the money, the best: APA CMI PCLN

For long termers looking to buy XLB is the materials sector ETF (top ten stock holdings for XLB).

As always, this is not advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell. Cheers.

Friday, June 06, 2008

Easy come, easy go

Yikes! I didn't see today's drop coming. The employment report and tension between Israel and Iran make for a perfect storm for the bears. Oil leaps $11 to $139 per barrel. GLD follows.

As always, what next is the most important question to ask. If the stock market gaps down on Monday's open, that may be a time to add to longs. The Fed has its hands ties as far as more interest rate cuts. The Fed is partly responsible for the weak dollar and the surge in oil and commodities.

I tell myself to stay calm, that there will be opportunities in the carnage, cut losses and live to trade another day.

Long EWZ, IWM
Short SHLD, TSL

Short TSL (sell calls)

Sell TSL Jun 55 calls
TSL down on earnings and outlook.

Positions all hedged
Long EWZ, IWM
Short SHLD, TSL

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Buy EWZ (sell puts)

Buy EWZ via selling the Jun 80 puts

Positions: long IWM, EWZ, short SHLD all hedged

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

one, two, three strikes?

Two down days this week so far. I am looking for a third to add long positions. If that third day doesn't
materialize, Friday may be the day.

GLD options started trading today. Happens to coincide with a bad day for oil and gold. I'm sure that some gold newsletters are going to write about their interpretation of events.

Positions: long IWM, short SHLD

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Short SHLD (sell calls)

Short SHLD via selling the Jun 100 calls
SHLD Sears/Kmart lower on poor earnings and sales.

Positions: long IWM, short SHLD

Jaffe: Fully Invested Life

Chuck Jaffe at Marketwatch writes about his father-in-law's financial path in life (article).

>>
... people worry about getting the absolute most from their money, about getting optimal results from each and every purchase and transaction.
...
The moral of his financial story is a simple one: Financial goals are about more than just money. Factor in the time, worry, personal values, hopes, dreams, and anything else tied to money, then take a path that allows you to reach your goals, not just by the number but in keeping with your personal attitude.
>>

When young people ask me about investments, I ask how much time, effort do they want to spend? How much do they enjoy the process of picking stocks or funds? For many the answer is that they don't have much interest, and don't want to spend much time. For them, the best path may be what some call "lazy portfolios," using ETFs and/or index mutual funds.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Kohler: "Trade small, don't be a hero"

Option Addict Jeff Kohler is re-running what he calls his greatest hits (exit-ideas article).

>>
Trade small, don't be a hero. Plan on doing whatever is necessary to be here to trade again tomorrow. If you are on a bad streak, step away! If it seems that you are always on a bad streak, maybe it's not the market.... maybe it's not the stock... maybe it's your system!
>>

I have written many times about the risk/reward of being the hero and calling top or bottom. There are a lot more dead heroes often losing everything, than those who are successful calling major market turns.

Positions: long IWM hedged

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Dividend ETFs and Bond ETFs

Here is a raw list of dividend ETFs (link)

Here is a list of all ETFs sorted by annual expense ratio (link)

Sorting through the data on the two lists and the following seem the most interesting to me:
DVY, PIP, SDY, VIG, VWY

For another opinion with more of a focus on current yield, I found this Gary Gordon article.Gordon's top three are: DEM, DWX, DVY

For Bond ETFs my short list includes:
TLT because it has options
BND Vanguard bond index with low expenses
SHY low volatility.

As always for the average person (vs. the gunslinging trader), dollar cost averaging into age appropriate investments is often the best road.

Position: long IWM hedged

Friday, May 23, 2008

Buy IWM (sell puts)

Buy IWM Russell 2000 ETF via selling the Jun 65 puts. Some fear finally showing up after a week of mostly down days, with the VIX perking up. These options are seven points out of the money, so it will take a smash down of 10% for them to be exercised against me. I am dipping my big toe back in the water after having all my positions expire last week.

Long IWM hedged

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Oil: one bull, one bear

Two views on oil from MarketWatch, the bearish article (link), the bullish article (link).

The bullish short term target is $140, only $6 away, so it isn't that bullish. The bear says that he is typically early. Of course, it is dicey trying to play oil at this point (or any stock or commodity that has seen a huge bull move).

One scenario I can see is a spike top on big news. That might tempt me to try and go short, though my history trading energy stocks is poor, so I tend to shy away from this sector. Usually the XLE makes a secondary top after spot crude has topped, but counting on that history to repeat isn't something I would like to tempt, considering the move up.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Mild sell off, AMZN, GLD

The stock market had a nice run up, so today's sell off seems mild and contained. Of the 30 Dow stocks, the only two that were up were the oils, XOM and CVX.

AMZN was upgraded on Monday. There are about three days worth of shorts in the stock, so on the third day from Monday (Thursday), I might look to buy puts, or sell calls.

Gold has had a very good week, though oil continues to show more relative strength. Historically, oil and gold have a strong correlation.

No current trading positions

Friday, May 16, 2008

GLD options coming soon

Barrons (link) reports that options on GLD might start trading as soon as May 30, 2008.

>>
After about four years of waiting, wanting, and whining, options on GLD could be listed as early as May 30, according to the Chicago Board Options Exchange.

Chickens and chicken feed

I am counting my chickens today, as my short options expire. Small profits to be sure, but any profits are good in the current market environment.

AXP, EWZ, HON, PCLN puts all expire, and I get to keep all the premiums

I've been cautious, a stock market "chicken" so to speak, so it seems appropriate to label these profits "chicken feed." Enjoy the weekend. Cheers.

Positions: none

Famous quotes and trading styles

Motley Fool has an article (link) on eight famous quotes that can be applied to investing. This is my favorite of the bunch:

>>
"If you hold a cat by the tail, you learn things you cannot learn any other way."

-- Mark Twain

And if you own a stock that tanks beyond recovery, you'll learn something that no collection of financial horror stories will teach you...
>>

I tell people that the emotional part of trading is the hardest part. For this reason, I rarely make sweeping predictions, and don't spend time on paper trading contests. Few people have ice in their veins and remain calm and logical when they are losing money. Few remain logical and thorough after a series of big winners. Again, a baseball analogy of not getting too high or too low is appropriate.

I also tell people that there are a thousand different ways to make money in the stock market. The trick is finding one that works for your personality. My trading style with its small gains, and potentially big losses would drive some mad. However, over my many years, I have found that these are the kind of trades that have historically worked out best for me. When I swing for the home runs, and when I want to hold for the long term instead of cutting losses, those are the times I usually lose, often losing big.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Complacent VIX, Motley Fool Buffett picks

At Adam Warner (blog link) writes about Jason Goepfert's findings:
>>
I checked for any other time since 1990 that the VIX hit a six-month low, while the S&P 500, on which the VIX is based, was still at least 1% below its own three-month high. That would show us times when traders were assuming a low-volatility environment despite prices that might not justify that assumption.

Returns in in the S&P 500 going forward were substandard (and negative) going out as far as two month's. From one to ten days out, the S&P was positive less than 45% of the time, and showed an average return that that varied between -0.1% and -0.8%. Not a huge negative edge, but certainly less than random.
>>

Over at Motley Fool, they have an interesting stock screen trying to find so-called Buffett stocks (article). I like PBR Petro Brasil best from that list.

Positions: AXP, EWZ, HON, PCLN, all hedged longs
out-the-money short puts expiring 5/16/08

Friday, May 09, 2008

Buffett and derivatives

Berkshire Hathaway disclosed paper losses on some of their long term SP index puts.

Here is a blog entry at Financial Crookery about that position (link) see May 8 entry. It is a bit deep in jargon, so option newbies might find it difficult reading.

Positions: long AXP, EWZ, HON, PCLN
all are out of the money short puts expiring next Friday 5/16

Buy PCLN (sell puts)

Buy PCLN Priceline via selling the May 125 puts
stock breaks out on earnings report. Strike price of puts is at chart base.
Sell May 125 PCLN puts

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Cycle top May 8?

From Marketwatch (link)
>>
Bennet Sedacca of Minyanville notes that a combination of annual, decennial and presidential cycles yields a potential "top date" for the S&P on May 8. Those were, so you know, the same cycles that suggested a low on March 15th.
>>

As I have opined before, calendar cycles are one of the weakest influences on the stock market. That said, if the yearly calendar pattern has its way, the market will hold its own into May option expiration (5/16/08).

Crunch time in the stock market today, lots of stock got hit including my three (AXP, EWZ, HON).

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Buy EWZ (sell puts)

Buy EWZ (Brazil ETF) by selling the May 85 puts

These are currently about nine points out of the money, so it is like putting in a bid at a sharp pullback. I am surprised at the overall stock market strength, considering the price of oil continuing up.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Sell BRKB Berkshire Hathaway

Sell BRKB for small profit, earnings below estimates. Over the long term, I believe that earnings more than anything else (eg: technicals, balance sheet, sales) drive the stock price.

Positions: hedged longs AXP, HON

Friday, May 02, 2008

Bear Market Rally?

Random Roger is convinced (blog, look at May 2, 2008 entry):
>>
Feel good rallies are a normal part of the bear market landscape. This is either a run of the mill feel good rally or I am wrong and this whole financial crisis/housing price deflation/bond market distortion will turn out to be nowhere near as important as many people thought.

What do you think is more likely?

I am convinced this is a bear market rally, there is no convincing me otherwise. That does not guarantee I will be right of course
>>

Positions: long BRKB, hedged longs: HON, AXP

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Brazil Brasil

Breakout on EWZ. Unfortunately, the two day move up is 9%, so it is chasing if buying at the market. Still, the longer term looks compelling, based on the chart.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Yield curve deja vu (bullish signal)

Over at Vix and More (link) Bill Luby says the current yield curve looks like 2003. Back then, the set up brought a big bull market for stocks. As always, history rarely repeats exactly the same way, but it can be useful to find historical time frame comparisons. Yield curve has so many factors in it.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Gold vs. copper, GDX vs FCX

Gold continues down. GDX near important long term support at 40 (2-year chart). FCX which mines a variety of metals including copper has outperformed (chart). Another advantage of FCX is tighter spreads on the options. They are different, with FCX looking like the stronger play at the moment, but neither looks compelling at the moment.

Lately, support levels sometimes have meant little to nothing in terms of slowing or stopping downside momentum. Yous pays your money, yous takes your chances.

Positions: Long BRK.B, hedged long HON, AXP

Friday, April 25, 2008

Buy AXP (sell puts)

Buy AXP by selling the 42.5 puts
Stock is moving up through resistance on earnings, support at 45 and below

Positions: hedged long AXP, HON. Long BRK.B

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Morons? (Cramer)

Adam Warner blogs about Cramer saying that call sellers on GOOG were morons (link)
>>
You should recognize that pretty much every outsized gain, ones where the stocks go up on small, niggling positives is about short-selling. The Google (GOOG) 480, 490, 500, 510 strikes? Tons of call-sellers, taking advantage of premiums too juicy to resist. Morons: limited upside, unlimited downside.


Breaking news: Naked call selling has unlimited upside risk. Never sell anything.

There is some validity to the notion that call shorts on expiration get trapped and are forced to chase a stock higher into the next call short. And so on.

But to call them morons is utterly.......moronic. GOOG did not just report earnings out of the blue. The date was known, the volatility was pumped, and selling options ahead of an earnings report is net-net not a bad strategy. There is an expected gain element to it, something beyond his black and white nonsense.
>>

My take: if someone bets the ranch by selling options, puts or calls, before earnings or even after, the insult might be appropriate. However, keep in mind that the volatility is in the price of the options before the report. Sometimes the option buyers win, but certainly not always. It is easy to see in hindsight what the correct play was. Ahead of the report, not so easy. If the call sellers are morons, then the call buyers must be the opposite, since they are taking the other side of the bet. We'll see if the option buyers or sellers win with tonight's AAPL report, and who the moron's will be tomorrow.

The logical conclusion that one might come to is that buying calls before a big earnings announcement is a smart move? Hardly, the road to riches over the long term, though as in the case of GOOG, there are occasional home runs. A 35 point move was in the price, and the stock got an 80 point move. How often does it happen that way? If it happens often enough the price of the options keeps going up, until again selling the options becomes the better play. Options have a way of balancing things out that way. Those that continue to make big bets and wrong bets go down with the ship, and leave the game.

Stock market is frustrating me at the moment. Gold is even more frustrating for the gold bulls, what with oil continuing to make new highs and gold lagging worse and worse.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Sell INTC (buy back short puts)

Sell INTC buy back short May 21 puts
I am getting out with a small profit, following my rule: "never let a profit turn into a loss." Even if it looks like the stock may hold on this unpleasant day for most stock bulls.

Positions: long HON hedged, BRK.B unhedged

Sell CAL (cover short puts)

Sell CAL buy back May 17.5 puts
CAL in free fall this morning. I getting out with a 100% loss, of course that is only a point or two on the common stock. UAL news is bad, SP downgrade on Friday, fuel prices continue to edge higher. I am taking my lumps. Crunch.

Monday, April 21, 2008

In 2025 (China) and super cycles

Interesting reading from Barron's (article)

>>
PricewaterhouseCoopers forecasts that China will be the largest economy, having surpassed the U.S. in 2025. By 2050, Chinese gross domestic product will be 29% larger than that of the U.S.
...
the fastest growing economy of the next four decades is forecast to be Vietnam, PwC says, with GDP growing 9.8% per annum, measured in dollars and 6.8% as measured using purchasing power parity.

...
Mexico's bonds, rated triple-B or the equivalent, have seen their yields decline below what the bonds of triple-A-rated General Electric pay. That bears repeating: Triple-B Mexico bonds yield less than triple-A GE debt.

Mexico's benchmark dollar-pay bonds due 2015 yield 4.65%. A triple-A GECC bond due 2012 yields 4.65% while a GECC issue due 2017 yields 5.33%.

>>

Like I said interesting reading.

In a separate article there is discussion of 60 year-super cycles that suggests a top in bonds, with much higher interest rates on the way, sooner rather than later, and a top in commodities in about one year give or take.
article

Friday, April 18, 2008

Buy HON and CAL (sell puts)

Buy HON via selling the May 55 puts
HON higher on earnings, solid support at 55 to 57

Buy CAL via selling the May 17.5 puts
Fare hike is good news, earnings just out were not a disaster. Strike price on puts is at the lows so there is chart support.

Positions:
Long CAL, INTC, HON, MON hedged (with MON expiring today)
Long BRK.B

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Earnings giveth and taketh

GOOG makes for the third big name tech related stock with booming earnings, INTC, IBM, and now GOOG. Some other stocks didn't have such good news such as NOK and PFE. Some stocks fell on what looked to be decent reports such as EBAY, and some rallied on what on the surface looked to be bad earnings such as MER.

As always, my opinion is that earnings are the main engine for stock performance, more important than most other factors.

I got crunched today in BRK.B and am none too happy. I am tempted to double up the position--we'll see. MON short puts are expiring tomorrow, stock is up 15% since I wrote the options. I am also short the May 21 puts on INTC. I was tempted to buy some IBM, but missed the best time window. I reminded myself that it is easy to get overconfident and have the market crunch me like a cat playing with a mouse.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Buy Berkshire Hathaway BRK.B

Buy Berkshire Hathaway
BRK.B is about 1.5% off its 2008 lows, while SPY is about 4% off the March lows. The anecdotal side is that some BRK.B holders may have sold recently to pay taxes.

Positions:
long INTC hedged
long MON expiring this Friday 4/18
long BRK.B

Buy INTC (sell puts)

Buy INTC by selling the May 21 puts
INTC higher on earnings and outlook

Gold booming up this morning. Interesting.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Farrell: Investors are irrational

On Marketwatch, Paul B. Farrell writes (link)

>>
No matter how much new information, facts, data, tips, slogans, theories and systems are pumped into your brain by these well-intentioned "investor education" programs, irrationality always trumps rational thinking. Seriously, think about the wealth of new online resources and technologies since the 1990s "information revolution." Has it helped? No. In fact, just the opposite: The investor's brain has regressed, becoming less intelligent and vastly more irrational. You simply cannot make an irrational brain "less irrational" by filling up it up with more information!

>>

Cynical to be sure. The cliche is that a fool and his/her money are soon parted. The corollary is that you can't save every fool in the world.

Elsewhere earnings continue to move the markets. Big fish INTC had an overall positive report, despite missing estimates, and that will likely drive a whole herd of stocks higher, just as GE's miss drove the entire market lower. Like I wrote, the earnings sword cuts both ways.

Adam Warner at his blog writes
>>
GE lays an egg, the market gets nervous that it's not just financial that will take earnings hits and everyone wants puts in CAT and HON and I imagine Whirlpool and a host of others too. Clearly there is money flow into puts, but is that really smart money, with the implication that you want to follow it?
>>

Is that "smart money" or are they sheep?

Gold continues to underperform oil, continuing to send mixed messages.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Billy don't be a hero

I resist the temptation to buy IWM (actually sell puts as usual) near closing time. The market looks to me like it is prime for a decent rally from here. The topic is the title of an old song: Billy don't be a hero, don't be a fool with your life. How many times have I written that calling bottom and rushing in to buy is a difficult game, and often means more risk than reward.

With hindsight glasses, I should have stayed short SMH, short VLO, and even long NKE. Overall with this skittish market, it is better to be a live chicken with a few pecks of profit than a brave and dead tiger that stood his/her ground.

Long MON hedged

Cover short SMH (buy back short calls)

Cover short SMH, buying back the short SMH Apr 31 calls for a tiny profit, but a profit.
I am nervous about this market. The earnings sword cuts both ways. Today's bad report from bellwether GE can be easily followed by good reports from other companies. One factor in my decision is that Vix and More (link) reports a lot of puts being traded, so a big stock market decline would be unlikely and a fierce rally would not be unusual.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Short SMH (sell calls)

Short SMH the semiconductor ETF via selling the Apr 31 calls

Semis up on upgrades and Bank America analyst comments. Chart shows resistance at 31, that and the good news upgrades, looks to be a good window to short the stock.

Elsewhere, Mark Hulbert notes the unusual bearishness of gold newsletters (link). Another feather for the bullish case.

Long MON hedged, Short SMH hedged

Gold:cup half empty or half full?

The half full side is the decent rally given the news back drop of IMF gold sales. The half empty side is that crude oil makes a new high and gold is still 10% off its high. Gold and oil have had a strong correlation. I am undecided, so the appropiate cliche is: "when in doubt, get out."

Elsewhere, I was tempted to buy BA on Tuesday, but got cold feet in front of the news. The delay on the 787 Dreamliner was already in the stock, and the news that current year estimates would hold sent the stock up. Volatility drained out of the options after the announcement.

Positions: long MON hedged

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Lazy Portfolios

Paul Farrell at MarketWatch writes about so-called Lazy Portfolios (article)
>>
Follow these guidelines:
  1. Asset allocation outperforms stock picking
  2. Compounding builds long-term asset values
  3. No-load index funds beat actively managed funds
  4. Buy and hold, adding new money from savings
  5. Market timing and active trading is a loser's game
  6. Trust yourself, you're the expert, do-it-yourself
The simplest one listed in the article is the 2nd grade starter:
60% Vanguard Total Stock Market Index
30% Vanguard Total International Stock Index
10% Vanguard Total Bond Index

As always for the average person, one of the best ways to go is diversifying into age appropiate investments, and dollar cost averaging. It may not be exciting, but it is effective.

Sell WM buy back puts

Sell WM buy back short Apr 9 puts
News isn't so great. Getting out with a break even profit.

Positions: long MON hedged

Monday, April 07, 2008

Buy WM, sell puts

Buy WM via selling the Apr 9 puts
Stock higher on news. Support at 10, and more at 9. Close below 10 is mental stop.

Friday, April 04, 2008

Bill Gross: "T-Bonds overvalued"

Bill Gross, chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Company, or PIMCO on bonds:

"I think Treasuries are the most overvalued asset in the world, bar none" (Reuters article)

>>
Coming from him, that is something that makes me sit up and take notice because bonds are his primary business. Barrons also has a bearish column on bonds (link). Given all this bearishness, bonds are likely to push higher in the short term.

Meanwhile, Friday's stock market action is encouraging. If the stock market was going to tank, it had every opportunity to do so, with the weak employment report, and decent rally this week for longs to go home for the weekend flat with a profit. Some sectors are still weak, including big banks, and airlines. With the terrible news in airlines this week, it is a time to be looking at them. Though, as always, calling bottom is rarely a profitable game.

As for gold, it had a relief rally after the big plunge. Seems that the coupling to oil, remains very strong. I still think lower lows are likely for gold, though, the secular bull still has a long time to go. This means short term lower, long term much higher. I still don't like the risk/reward for traders--readers know I am not a gunslinger who likes making the big bets.

Positions: long MON hedged

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Buy MON (sell puts)

Buy MON (sell Apr 95 puts)

Earnings good, guidance conservative. Mental stop on a close below 100.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Boom goes the dynamite

Wow, I didn't expect the huge stock rally today, or the huge decline in precious metals.

Both situations were building up pressure. April is the best month for stocks since 1950. There may be some selling during the middle of the month to pay income taxes.

I was tempted to get on board the bull bandwagon, but reminded myself of the many whipsaws that have come after recent booming up days. All 30 Dow stocks were up. There will be lower risk times to get in.

Flat with no trading positions.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Hold on to your nuts :)

I heard a stock market pundit use this phrase, something like:

It is time to hold on to your nuts, like squirrels getting ready for winter, not a time to be aggressive.

For 2008, I have been making a fair number of trades, usually getting out with tiny profits at the first whiff of trouble. So far I am at break even for the year, only the broker is making money while I tread water. Yes, some folks are making money, however, far more are losing. It is a market that is very easy to trade in hindsight, not so easy in real time, with wide intraday swings, and more whipsaws than sustained moves.

I remind myself to stick to my knitting, meaning the kind of trades I do best on, instead of seeking the exotic, and high risk home run swings. I am back to flat with no trading positions.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Cover VLO (buy back short calls)

Cover VLO buy back short Apr 55 calls
A break even profit. I am not understanding the reason for the rally. "When in doubt get out," especially in this up and down market.

Band predicts Dow 16000 by 2009

Richard Band is quoted as predicting Dow 16000 over at Marketwatch (article).

>>
Technical factors appear to have led Band to make such a bold prediction, which amounts to a 33% return for the overall market over the next 12 months.
>>

Most newsletter timers are bearish, actually net short according to Hulbert. As for myself, I think lower lows are the most likely course. Interesting.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Short VLO (sell calls)

Short VLO sell Apr 55 calls
News from Iraq gives this refining stock a pop. I am fading the move. A close above 52 would be cause for worry.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Sell NKE (buy back short puts)

I close out the NKE Apr 60 puts. Overall market is sliding. I am skittish enough to head for the exit, instead of waiting for the action to sort itself out. This puts me back to flat (no trading positions).

Meanwhile, GLD and GDX have retraced part of last week's steep decline. I still think that odds favor lower lows in the precious metals and won't try chase this rally. Too many newbies in the metals market, and almost none of them are scared. Of course, odds are never a guarantee.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Another leg down for stocks, and metals

Stock buyers seem too sanguine for the low to be in. The market has been beat down, and certain sectors such as banks, and housing have been rallying. The rally likely has more to go, however, I do not think the ultimate lows for this bear move are in. As always be careful.

Same deal with precious metals. Silver buyers have bought up all the physical they can get their hands on, with many online dealers sold out, or having much higher minimums. When buyers are so eager to buy on the first dip, odds favor a second leg down, a lower low. That said, the three day smash may cause a bounce. Looking at the GDX one year chart, it has seen numerous three day smashes, and most of the time there are lower lows down the road. So it may be time to look to get in, but watch for a better opportunity and don't chase any rallies.

For those that celebrate Good Friday, and even those that don't, a peaceful day to you.

Hedged Long NKE

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Buy NKE (sell puts)

Buy NKE, by selling the April 60 puts
Stock is higher on earnings. Chart is supportive.

NKE is my only trading position

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Green after St. Patricks Day

Wall Street celebrated the day after St. Patrick's Day with a monster rally and green plus signs every where. Financials led the way with LEH reporting good earnings before the open. Gold was one of the few losers on the day. The 3/4 point rate cut was less than the widely rumored full point cut and the dollar rallied and gold fell.

As I have been writing for a whole week, the Fed rate cut has been baked into the cake. Past Fed moves have been kind to gold, not so much today as gold got clobbered. The stock rally was more on the health of some brokerage stocks. Rumors circulated about MER, but even that could not do more than an hour of damage on this rally day.

It is painful to miss these big rallies. It is more painful to be short. For 2008, I am holding my own, despite all my trades being on the long side in the face of a steep market decline. I have been cautious, cut losses, and been lucky enough to avoid the disaster stocks such as BSC, HUM and others. My one losing trade, so far in 2008, ironically, was GDX, which had a miserable day today.

As always, what next? Hard for me to believe the coast is clear for the stock market, though with Good Friday coming up on this short trading week, lets see if the market can make it to the holiday without another crisis. Late March, early April, sometimes has investors selling to pay their tax bills.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Growth vs. value - three lessons

From John Prestbo at Marketwatch (link)
>>
First, never rely completely on past patterns prevailing in the present or future. Lots of busy, distracted and lazy investors will do just that, which creates opportunity for those who take the time to observe market trends carefully.

Second, develop a keen appreciation of the interconnected nature of the market. Large and small, growth and value, industry-group and sector -- they all are entwined; anything affecting one will affect the others. Banks took it on the chin in the subprime mess, and look what that's done to large-cap value as a strategy.
...
Third, when the market starts climbing again, don't assume the most-clobbered style will rebound the fastest. In the year following the market bottom on Oct. 9, 2002, the DJ Wilshire Growth Index did soar a stunning 39.87%. But that was only slightly better than the 38.61% gain for the DJ Wilshire Value Index. And value outperformed growth over the ensuing three years.

>>

Sunday, March 16, 2008

BSC to be bought for $2

Wow, what a turn of events. BSC shareholders get the big banana, all time high of 160 to 57 Thursday to 30 on Friday to 2! Yikes!

As of this writing SP futures, Japanese bonds, gold are all higher. I can't understand how the BSC take under can be good news for stocks, bonds and gold, so I expect this to sort itself this week. I dodged a bullet, because I saw those huge premiums on BSC options on Friday and was so tempted. Many times in my past, chasing those big premiums as an option writer has led to disaster.

My instinct is to sit out this dance and wait for more clarity. To quote Clint Eastwood, "a man has to know his limitations." Fast moving volatile markets are a dangerous place for relatively slow moving position traders such as myself. The baseball analogy would be to wait for my pitch instead of swinging wildly at the nasty slider being thrown at the moment. I may look to take on some positions, but they will be small with a decent margin of error.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Panic, smoke and fire

Bill Luby at VixandMore (link):

>>
the ratio [VIX vs. 10 year T-note yield] is currently at levels seen only during extreme crisis or panic market environments.

>>

BSC options players (OptionAddict) were sniffing at the bad news and bid up the premiums way up before the news today. With the news, the premiums went to the moon, so high that I was tempted to sell some of the options, but reminded myself of the out sized risks of high premiums. The smoke is now full five-alarm fire, with the possible buyout or take under of BSC as the most likely outcome.

So with the high fear factor, is it time to load the boat on the long side? Especially, if we get a gap down open on Monday, I'll look to take a shot at the long side. The Fed meeting might bring a full point rate cut, and/or more measures like the $200 billion short term loan problem. Watching this, it feels like the Fed is trying to build a sand castle on the edge of a rising high tide. Each massive effort only lasts as long as the intervals between the bad news.

Yes, at some point the tide will turn and the bad or terrible surprises will end and the market will rally for real. As I have written many times, calling bottom is rarely a profitable game (same with calling top). It sure is exciting and fun, but it is difficult and high risk. I prefer something easier with the odds in my favor.

Sell IWM (buy puts)

Buy back short puts on IWM for modest profit, so am back to being flat (out of market). ThinkorSwim Analyzer (my brokers software) shows 5% of closing before 63, then as the market slides, odds increase to 9% by the time I exit and more like 20% at the lows of the day. I take my modest profit following my rule: Never let a profit turn into a loss. Stock futures indicated a huge bump up before the open, but it didn't materialize and faded to a loss before the first half hour on BSC news.

/edited for typos: originally posted 9:49 PDT

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Gold $1000

Spot gold didn't quite make $1000 on the bid, but futures and the ask did, before settling back. The Fed has been kind of gold during the recent months. Let us see if that streak continues next week, with Fed futures traders betting on a 75 basis point cut. Long term, I continue to believe that there is plenty of fuel left in the gold rocket. Short term, a lot of fish have been hooked, with more and more newbies jumping in and buying when they didn't want any gold at $700, or $400 or lower.

With oil spiking up, airlines have been spiking down.

Positions: Long IWM hedged

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Ben saves the Bulls

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke saves the bulls with a $200 billion liquidity pump to bail out weak financial institutions. By allowing them to use bad loans as collateral, one wonders what happens at the end of 28 days. It is a bit over my head.

What next? That is always the most relevant question. Schaeffer's (link) reports that Fed Fund futures are factoring in a 75 basis point rate cut at the Fed meeting next week. 75!? Wow.

Long IWM

Monday, March 10, 2008

Another banana

The market feeds the bulls another banana today, as the decline continues. I am getting hammered after dipping my toe in the water on the long side. IWM nearing my mental stop of a close below 64 (64.50 Monday). I was tempted to double up on Friday, and again today. Usually this isn't a good sign, so I resisted the impulse.

I remain mostly in cash with my toe in the frigid market waters, long IWM via short puts

GDX has a strong down reaction day, down 3.8%, even though the gold futures hold up fairly well, with GLD down only 0.23%

Random Roger has some thoughts about indicators and bear markets (link) see March 10, 2008 entry.
>>
Reading things like put call ratios starts to get tricky if you believe this is a bear market. This is a point in the cycle where it is easy to get fooled. The market is down almost 20%, I'm sure if you looked you could find an indicator or two to tell you the market is oversold
...
Compelling as they may be, if it is a bear market all of these things will be wrong. Bear markets last longer than five months and on average go down more than 20%, closer to 3o% actually.
>>

Another 12% down would bring it into "average" bear market range. What if this is the "big" one? The way most pundits can tell is using their hindsight glasses.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Carl Futia on Speculation

In the archives I found this interesting column by Carl Futia (article) from 2005.
>>
Sad to say, intelligence has little to do with success in speculation ...

What is really needed for successful speculation is not intelligence but what speculators call an "edge". An edge is a piece of knowledge or a reliable instinct which predicts the direction of market prices and that is not shared by too many other speculators.

You can't get an edge by reading the finance or technical analysis books you bought on Amazon or at Barnes and Noble. The information they contain is fine as far as it goes, but the trouble is that it is information that everone else has too! It can't give you an edge on other speculators. For the same reason you can't get an edge by attending a seminar that promises to reveal market secrets which will lead you to wealth.
>>

Sometimes friends or acquaintances tell me they have signed up for or already taken a seminar or class or bought some whiz bang software. For the reasons stated so clearly above, it rarely works. What I tell everyone is that there are a 1000 ways to make money, a 1000 different approaches to the markets. Find the one, two or five that work for you and fit your personality. Something that works for me, may not work for the next person because of their temperament and inclinations. Mechanical systems need to be adaptive, because there are now so many formula spinners testing their trading systems night and day.

It is the weekend so I will ramble on a bit. Investing is different from speculating. For the average person, diversifying into age appropriate asset classes, and dollar cost averaging will out do most would be speculators. Same when getting out, get out a little bit at a time. Making big bets is entertaining and exciting, but few folks continually take big risks and win enough to offset the losses. Readers know that my style is to cut losses, and hedge to limit risks. Again, with spring training upon us, the analogy is a singles hitter in baseball vs. the home run hitter that strikes out a lot. Both styles can be successful, a lot depends on personality and execution.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Buy IWM fund (sell puts)

Buy IWM, sell Mar 63 puts

IWM didn't make a new low on the gap lower. I am buying closer to the highs than the lows for the day. Mental stop is on a close below 64.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Bottom or bananas?

Today stock market bulls got the banana. Is this event the big banana (a steep decline) or a bottom with a retest of the lows?

Fear as measured by the volatility index is perking up but not screaming yet (VIX chart). Newsletter sentiment has turned quite bearish so a tradeable bottom is getting closer (Marketwatch sentiment article).

Traditional chart reading says if IWM breaks below 64 (chart) the next downside target is the width of the recent range or eight points, giving a target of 56. Today's close just above 66. Another possible scenario is taking out the stop below the tick low of 64.19, and then a trading rally. If the market gaps to the downside at the open tomorrow, that might be a sign of capitulation and a good entry point for longs.

When in doubt get out, and that is where I have been and continue to be--out.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Retesting the low

I've mentioned several times that a retest of the recent lows might be a good time to buy. Today some traders were watching the SP500 closely as it neared the recent lows. The SPY is a proxy and doesn't show the retest as clearly (six-month-chart).

The way it happened makes me suspect. Another rumor about a much anticipated bailout of ABK. A similar rumor about ten days ago, launched a furious rally of four days and about 5%. This rally could fizzle before 24-hours with a much more modest gain off the low. The market doesn't look so good to me. Early March is a strong seasonal period. A good bit of IRA money flows in at this time, along with early tax return money. Those that have to write a check, tend to do it closer to deadline and may account for some of the traditional seasonal weakness in stocks in late March.

Precious metals had a hard down day. Certainly not a time to panic either way, after the gains that have occurred. A lot of fish seem to be biting on this move up. When enough little fish are in, the big fish will close the trap and take their money by shaking them out with some sharp and violent price drops.

I am looking at a lot of stocks, but remain flat for now.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Silver $20

Wow, the parabolic move in silver continues. A double off the base takes silver to $26/$28. That would be where I would look to take trading profits, if I had a bunch of it. I don't have bunches and bunches, but do have a decent amount for the long term.

Still some skepticism on this move as a lot of silver coins are going for less than spot. When retail demand is high, the newbies will pay over spot because they want to get it. It probably is no more than an anecdotal indicator, but it is easy enough to watch.

Stock market recovers off its lows. Some of the buying might be beginning of the month inflows. I am not convinced that the bottom is in.

Trading positions: none

Friday, February 29, 2008

Rollercoaster ride continues

I've been flat for some time now. The rally off last Friday's low fizzled, but it was a relatively big move as trading rallies go. Again, the hindsight traders have a field day, buying at the lows, getting out at the top, in hindsight that is, not in real life.

IBM looks like a tempting long with their announced buy back. However, I think it has plenty of room lower before they get aggressive on the buy side.

Silver nears $20. Gold continues to make new highs. It is foolish to try and call top when the bullish momentum remains strong. It would also be foolish to try and jump on the moving train on the long side. Long termers should be looking to add to positions on pullbacks. My opinion is that it is still early in the bull market. Some other commodities have out performed the metals. Gold in particular hasn't done all that well considering what oil has done. Gold and oil have a strong historical correlation.

Again, for me, the temptation is to try and time each of these short lived swings, and over trade. I resist the temptation and continue to wait for my pitch. Right now, most markets are too wild and wooly for my taste. I couldn't pull the trigger going long bonds early this week (TLT). In hindsight, a missed opportunity.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Bond chart at Barron's

Article on the bond market over at Barron's (link). The headline is "Bad News for Bonds." Actually, the short term looks like a rally is due. Interesting.

Also in this week's Barron's is a cautionary article about options training (link). There are a good many folks offering expensive training for trading options. Unfortunately, in most cases, those that sign up for the classes lose their shirts. Options can be used conservatively for hedging. They can also be used for speculating in a high risk fashion. Sadly, many newbies are taught to take on high risk positions. A tiny fraction will make good returns and those folks are used to recruit the next class

Friday, February 22, 2008

Oil Refiners

Jeff Kohler at OptionAddict is taking a look at some refining stocks (article). WNR, HES, TSO are the three stocks mentioned.

On the other side are major oil stocks such as XOM, PBR that to me look toppy. Again, not much that I am saying other than oil stocks might go up, might go down.

This week saw wide intraday swings almost every day. Friday was another rollercoaster. If the rumored bailout doesn't pan out, the carnival ride might go down. It continues to be a tough market for position traders because it is easy to get stopped out, trends last a few hours instead of days and weeks.

Still flat with no positions.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Inflation

Today the market opens lower, then rallies strong. The mirror opposite of yesterday. I am tempted by some trades, but do not pull the trigger.

Gold makes an all time high. I continue to believe that it is early in the bull market for gold. Inflation hasn't even shown up yet. I hear some isolated reports about gasoline, college tuition, or healthcare or inflation numbers that factor in the huge increase in home prices over the past decade. Will these inflation figures now show deflation now that home prices are going down? I doubt it, that doesn't sell newsletters.

The Treasuries tell the tale of the inflation tape. Some will argue that this is being distorted by heavy foreign buying. That may be true to an extent, but a person can't buy bonds or options on these made up figures that people float on the Internet. A person can buy Treasuries, or sell them short. With the 30 year bond under 5%, I have a very hard time believing that inflation is running at 8% to 10%. No rational person would buy bonds if the real inflation rate was 10% and bonds are paying 4.5%.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Apocalypse now?

Peter Brimelow reports on Harry Schultz (link). Unlike many doom and gloomers Schultz has an audited track record (up 6.4% over the past 12 months).

Schultz writes on gold:
"Exposure to gold shares and bullion should be a minimum of 35-45% of your total portfolio, with at least 10% in physical gold bullion and coins (preferably held in boxes outside of U.S.) ... If not already done so, use the current U.S. dollar mini-rebound to exit U.S. dollars and/or hedge dollar-denominated assets via futures and/or bank forward contracts."
>>

Readers know that I have been and continue to be long term bullish on gold. I have suggested a 3% allocation to gold for average folks. Those that want more than that need to know what they are doing, and shouldn't be reliant on newsletters as the main source of their financial decisions making.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Platinum $2000

Platinum confirms the move above $2000. The chart looks like a rocket ship. Gold is lagging and is actually down today. The platinum run is fueled by supply concerns and electricity cutbacks in South Africa.

The stock market looks tempting to buy into. However, I have the nagging feeling that a lot more shoes are going to drop. Calendar seasonality points to the likelihood of more down days in late February. The caveat is that seasonality hasn't been worth much during this bear phase. All the puts I have sold and then bought back for Feb expiration look like they would all have expired out of the money today. In hindsight, I would have done better keeping all the positions, instead of closing them out for tiny profits. Trading is always easy in hindsight.

No open positions in my trading account.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Is the bottom in?

Is the bottom in? That is the question on most trader's minds. Today's strong Buffet induced rally, then fizzle makes one wonder. I don't have a strong opinion either way. Buying at a retest of the lows seems the high percentage play. Of course we might not get that retest. Selling naked puts at strike prices at the lows is one way to do an equivalent. Though if the market does drop to retest, those puts will mean a big paper loss. So far I haven't said much, other than the market might go up, might go down, might be unchanged. Sometimes the best thing to do is nothing. I took a look at one-year charts for each of the 30 Dow stocks and none of them look compelling short or long.

Gold had a bad day. The conspiracy folks will blame the IMF authorizing a sale gold. The central banks have less and less of the gold in play, so with each passing year, are less of an influence. Gold chart, and gold stock charts look terrible, and if I weren't a long term bull, I would be tempted to try to play the weakness.

Friday, February 08, 2008

Sell SHLD (buy back puts)

Sell SHLD buy back short SHLD Feb 85 puts
Stock not acting well. I am taking my tiny profit while it is there. This calendar year, my winners have all been tiny minnows, and with my one loser on GDX out weighing all the winners after factoring in commissions. This isn't exactly a recipe for long term success, however, with this turbulent market, it isn't bad.

>> Oops, Thursday's buy for SHLD didn't seem to make the blog. I opened the SHLD position yesterday. Getting out in one day with a guppy-size profit.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

The Pink Elephant

At Marketwatch (link)
Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Charles Plosser spoke against overly aggressive rate cuts, with the talk dampening a rebound from the market's largest single-day plunge in nearly a year.

When the Fed did its .75 emergency rate cut, I commented that there are worse fates for the U. S. economy than a mild recession (blog entry). It isn't as if all those Fed members don't understand that, but Bernanke got them all to do the cuts anyway.

The market continues to be treacherous. Last week's huge gains, and Tuesday's huge dip and then today's whipsaw action show the double edged nature of the market for position traders. Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, for anyone that wants in this game.

Gold has had similarly wild swings. I continue to opine that gold is in a secular bull market and the thing to do is buy the dips. Traders can continue to look for low risk entry points. Right now, there is plenty of risk, so best to stand aside.


Monday, February 04, 2008

Sell SNE (buy back puts)

Sell SNE, buy back short Feb 40 puts
Sony earnings disappoint, especially on profit margin. Tape action is not good either. On the positive side, SNE is at support around the 45, however, in a bear market, support doesn't count for much.

No positions in my trading account.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Panic buying

Wow, another wild day, with a sharply lower open followed by steady buying. AMZN's earnings report gave the market a good excuse to go down if that is what it wanted to do. Instead, AMZN closed higher after a -12% reading after-hours on Wednesday.

If the bottom is already in, and only time will tell if that is true, for many stocks experienced that rare V-shaped bottom. While the gains off the lows are startling, in terms of percentages, it was a very small window for folks to get in near the lows.

Two losers include GDX, and GLD, this even while physical silver broke thru $17 an ounce for another new recovery high.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Fed does the expected 1/2 point cut

Fed does the expected half point cut. I am a bit stunned at the buying frenzy. Couldn't pull the trigger on shorts. It is not a high percentage play for position traders to step into the swift running water. Bonds sold off. Gold rallied. Then news of ratings cuts at bond insurers seemed to be like a bell ringing and everyone wanted out all at once. This might be considered classic bear market rally type of action--short, sharp rallies with very narrow time windows to get out.

Old timers will remember the old adages: "Don't Fight the Fed," and "Don't fight the tape." The Fed's moves will make a real difference for those with good credit. The tape is another matter. With the recent volatility, would be shorters need to pick their spots carefully. With these wide swings the temptation is to over trade, instead of being selective.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Consumer non-durable stocks

The old school conventional wisdom is that consumer non-durable stocks, in industries such as soda, razor blades, tobacco, are a good place to be when the economy tips into recession. The past couple of weeks has seen heavy selling in names such as Pepsi, and Merck. McDonald's had a tough day after earnings. Today Pepsi Bottling PBG got hit. While this has been going on, banks and airlines have continued their large bounces off their lows.

The overall market has rallied into the Fed meeting. The funny thing is that with Bernanke, it seems like the weaker the stock market is, the greater the chance of surprise rate cuts. If the rally continues strong tomorrow, it increases the chance that the Fed will think they have done enough and only cut 1/4 point, or do nothing. Traders playing the Fed Fund futures are currently favoring a half point cut.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Sell GE (buy back short puts)

Sell GE (buy back short puts)
I was disappointed that GE didn't rally along with many other stocks. Getting out with a break even profit. "Never let a profit turn into a loss."

Still long SNE

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Bear market rallies (Barron's)

Randall Forsyth at Barrons online has an article about bear market rallies. It focuses on the wild swing that took place on Wednesday. These sharp rallies are one reason it can be difficult to trade on the short side.

In the immediate aftermath of the Fed emergency rate cut, Treasury bonds went up in price (lower in yields). Now that the news is being digested, bonds are coming back down. It is an interesting thought process to be buying 30 year bonds, yielding less than 5%. Those that are doing so, seem confident that inflation is unlikely to be a major problem. Today, precious metals are jumping, so these two sides seem at odds. The bond market is the much bigger fish as compared to precious metals markets. In most stare downs the bigger fish will each the smaller fish. It will be interesting to watch.

Readers may remember that I see the long bond as a bellwether that often leads other markets. The Federal Reserve pushes the noodle on long term interest rates with the Fed Funds and discount rate. Sometimes, the Fed gets painted into a corner, when the long bond yield goes up in the face of rate cuts. So far that isn't happening, so for now the Fed still has room to manuever.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Buy GE (sell puts)

Buy GE (General Electric), sell Feb 32.5 puts

Another dip into the water on the bullish side, GE earnings already out and good.

Buy SNE (sell puts)

Buy SNE (Sony), sell the Jan 40 puts

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Fed saves day, but is it behind the curve?

Fed saves the U. S. stock market day with a surprise emergency rate cut of 3/4 of a point.

The hindsight trade was to buy the open and get out when the Dow got close to break even. I did nothing today. I did not follow the markets that closely. The spreads on options were very wide during the opening 10 minutes. Fast markets are not the place for position traders, looking for low risk entry points.

As for the rate cut, my personal opinion is that the Fed is behind the curve, reacting instead of getting out in front and being proactive. The worrisome thought is that the Fed has used up a lot of ammo and the economy isn't yet in recession. Is it worth the long term consequences, just to avoid one business cycle recession? It seems like Bernanke is acting like he will lose his job if a recession occurs. There are far worse fates for the economy in the long term than a mild recession.

If the Fed is low on ammo and a major external economic shock occurs what then? I am thinking in terms of plausible events such as another 9-11 style terrorist attack, a shooting war between India and Pakistan, China invading Taiwan. Perhaps subprime and the unwinding of subprime is the be all and end all. However, most folks that have been around a decade or more, understand that subprime, while significant, isn't the worst case economic scenario by any means.

Technically, a retest of today's opening lows on the indexes or on individual stocks might be a good place to look to go long.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Interesting times

There is an old curse, "may you live in interesting times." With overseas markets down 3% to 7%, and U. S. stock futures down about 4%, Tuesday looks to be an interesting day.

Support on SPY (2-year-chart) is about 123. Futures already are down to about 127. As I have always written, calling top or bottom is rarely a profitable game. Almost always there is a lower risk entry on a retest or pullback against the main trend.

Precious metals also getting hit with silver down about 3% overnight and gold down 2%. Margin calls may force some punters to liquidate their metals holdings.

Some have mentioned panic, but I have not seen much in the way of real panic as of yet. For the most part, declines have been orderly, and news is still able to drive stocks. Perhaps there will be some panic on Tuesday.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Sullivan bearish, Roger says 1/2 way down

Long time bull Dan Sullivan, writer of the top rated newsletter, The Chartist, turns bearish (article). Sullivan takes the extraordinary step of going to 100% cash. For those that don't know Sullivan, he has been around for a long time, successful for a long time (ranked 4th for the past 25 years) and most of the time is long on margin. For someone with Sullivan's track record, who often is 150% invested, the 100% cash position is something to sit up and take notice of.

Elsewhere, Random Roger (blog) adds what seems like a throwaway comment, but I find it interesting (Thursday Jan 17 entry):
At SPX 1351 we are down 13.6% from the closing high in October. If a normal bear market bottom is down 25-30% we are about half way there in magnitude but I would be surprised if we are halfway there in terms of time.

Time analysis can be as useful as price in analyzing and predicting future action.

One more: After today's close, IBM posts a decent outlook and the stock climbs $5 in after hours. Somewhere there is a bottom and some stocks have rallied on good news. The overall market hasn't shown signs of capitulation in terms of a huge volume day, or a runup in VIX. The decline remains orderly, and in a bear market that can mean a lot more downside.

Sell GDX (buy back puts)

Bad day to be selling puts. In this rare instance, I buy back the puts on the same day, taking a huge percentage loss. Ouch.

Buy GDX Jan 49 puts

Buy GDX (sell puts)

Sell GDX Jan 49 puts

/edit fixed earlier typo, trade was about 10:15 Eastern time

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Wild witching Wednesday

Options expiration activity used to mostly occur on expiration Friday. With the newer products, some that expire on Friday's open, the rollover to the next month often takes place on Wednesday. Stocks, gold, silver all had a wild ride, ending lower.

Intel's earnings miss, made for a lower open. The quick rally raised hopes for a stock rally day.

GLD got hit hard, and GDX even harder. This is normal bull market action, quick, sharp selloffs. As always it is price action that defines whether this will remain a bull market.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Cover AXP short (buy back call)

I cover AXP short (buy back the Jan 45 call). The shallow rally after I entered the position makes me nervous enough to take the profit now instead of waiting until Friday expiration.

In other news, GLD break 90, a couple of days after the spot price of gold crosses $900. Gold is overbought, however, it would be foolish to short, and almost as foolish to buy in at this time. GDX confirmed a new high yesterday, but today is again lagging.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Ferocious rally

The cliche is that bear-market rallies are sharp and short. Today's rally certainly had the look and feel of the bear. Selected stocks went up huge percentages with United Airlines up 20%, Countrywide Financial up 60%.

Gold makes another new all time high. Silver goes up a full 5%. It is high risk to buy here for trades. That said, I believe it is still early in the bull market for precious metals. That if there are sharp and short pullbacks those will be good times to buy.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Falling knives and running with scissors

Many stock charts are breaking down. They sometimes stop and pause at technical support, then when that fails, the bottom falls out. Most are a long way from being a buy from a valuation standpoint. Some industries have a business model that doesn't bank any of the profits from good times, so when times turn bad, there is no cash on hand or liquidation value to the shares.

With each day of consecutive new lows, it becomes increasingly tempting to try and pick a bottom, or conversely to short some shares that have held up. I remind myself that these kind of plays are high risk, and in part due to an itch to get back into the action after a long time on the sidelines. Thus the running with scissors analogy.

I do not see some of the telltale signs of a selling climax such as a rocketing VIX value or a huge volume capitulation day. Even then, there is so much downside momentum right now in many stocks, the safer play looks to be to short any rallies, rather than try and play any bounces.

A few folks are making money even in the tumble down market. A few have the nimbleness to play the short side, and there still remain isolated pockets of strength in so-called defensive sectors such as main stream drug companies. Some of the cyclical industries such as airlines and housing, have seen the bottom fall out, and like I wrote, have no book value to speak of, or a dependable future earnings stream, for value investors to look at.

Monday, January 07, 2008

$1000 gold? Merrill says no. $200 oil?

Looking at the six month chart on GLD, a basic analysis is to project a second price move, that equals the run from 65 to 84. That would take gold to about $1000.
At Kitco, Jon Nadler includes this nugget (link):
Merrill Lynch & Co. is forecasting spot gold prices will average $750 an ounce in 2008, up 7.6% from 2007 and ranging between $700 and $900 an ounce,

Schaeffer's reports some activity in the $200 call options on oil (link). Keep in mind that these options may be part of a spread or other other hedging behavior. If $200 a barrel oil does come, odds are that gold will likely go much higher than $1000, even though gold has lagged oil during the past couple of years, in terms of percentage gains.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

January effect, I'm back

I've been away for a while, I'm back.

The January effect: as goes January so goes the year. In particular, the first week of January gives a strong indication for the year ahead. If this holds, 2008 might be a year for the bears. As with any indicator, the January effect isn't close to 100%.

For those interested in reading more here is a link to a SeekingAlpha article
and for more of a novice view point an USAToday article