Daily Market Update – April 9, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 9, 2014 (8:30 AM)

Another seemingly flat morning, which basically means nothing.

The late Mark Haines, of CNBC, used to observe that the pre-opening market tended to have very little in common with what occurred subsequently. He often would say that on mornings when there was a decided move in either direction and so often he was right.

Lately the pre-open hasn’t been much of a barometer, In fact, the first 90 minutes of trading haven’t been a very good indicator, either. For anyone looking for themes or patterns there haven’t been many lately, other than the poor predictive capability of the first hour of trading.

Maybe with Alcoa kicking off earnings season last night the consideration of basic fundamentals, especially earnings, will become the theme. The only thing is that was precisely the same kind of hope over the past couple of earnings seasons, as well, and that sort of thing only lasted a week or so. Once the financials were done with their reports the rest didn’t really matter.

Today’s early morning trading appears fairly listless which isn’t altogether unusual, as this afternoon brings another FOMC minutes release. Most traders don’t really want to commit themselves in a significant way before any major announcement or event, especially if there’s any unknown component that may be released. So they sit and wait, maybe make a few incidental trades here and there, but mostly wait and then suddenly spring into action as the fastest of the systems runs its initial algorithm on the words themselves.

Maybe it’s just another of those signs of getting older, but it seems as if those monthly releases are coming much more quickly than at a monthly pace. Still, the one due today has gotten unusually little attention or mention.

While there’s not likely to be much new in the release that hasn’t stopped knee jerk and delayed reactions alike as the words are parsed and interpreted for meanings that were never intended.

While I didn’t expect much in the way of personal activity yesterday I expect even less today, although I wouldn’t mind any other opportunities to sell more call options on uncovered positions and begin looking forward to next week, which already marks the end of the monthly option cycle, which seems to also have come very quickly.

Looking forward to next week starts, as usual, with hoping for the rollover or assignment of as many positions as possible and once again, this week has too many positions with contracts set to expire.

As in recent past weeks the holdings aren’t terribly well diversified across the calendar so once again there’s a fair amount riding on the next couple of days. That’s not a position that I like being in and continue to be anxious to see a rise in volatility, as long as it waits until next Monday to begin in earnest.

Just to be clear, markets usually fall when volatility is rising, so let’s get through this week first and see those rollovers and assignments happen. Then the volatility can start to rise and bring with it better prices for all of that reserve cash to be put to
use.

If only it was all that easy.

 

 

PS: For those interested in something a little different, take a look at “Playing Leapfrog with MolyCorp” which explores another put related strategy that seeks to limit risk and enhance reward, especially with risky kind of positions.

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 8, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 8, 2014 (Close)

First of all, sorry for sending the rollover of Verizon Trading Alert so late yesterday.

As shares traded much higher in the latter part of the afternoon there was just no logical trade to be made. That changed in the final 20 minutes as shares started coming down a little from their day’s highs and an opportunity came to get some more premium and likely retain the dividend, although there were complicating considerations.

If you ever wanted to see what a “flight to safety” was all about, all you had to do was pay attention to Verizon in yesterday’s trading.

When the market started to further deteriorate in the early afternoon, making it begin to appear as if the day would be a lost cause and maybe a forerunner to something worse, Verizon did an about face at 12:25 PM.

It was probably no coincidence that today was its ex-dividend date, but shares soared well past their “threshold” value, that would have made early assignment of the April 11, 2014 $47.50 calls unlikely.

I was ambivalent about the prospects of rolling over the contract in order to retain the healthy dividend, especially since there was no $47.50 strike the following week and the week after was earnings week.

A quick calculation showed that the difference was an ROI of about 1.5%, based on the extra premium and keeping the dividend.

Since earnings are April 24th and the contract expires on April 25th, there’s also a chance that I’ll be looking to roll that contract over early, as well to mitigate earnings related risk.

However, what was especially interesting was that AT&T, which also went ex-dividend today, didn’t follow the same path. For a brief time in the mid-afternoon, it also started going higher as the market faltered, but then went back on a selling path.

The diverging behaviors yesterday probably sends some kind of message, but those messages typically have shorter and shorter half lives these days. Lately, even the fears of market corrections have very short half lives and deservedly so, because reality has borne out the fact they they are shallow and short lived of late.

Yesterday was not a very good day, but again, it was a day without much evidence of real panic, although the movement into Verizon may have been representative of an undercurrent of fear.

While the movement into safety wasn’t too much of a surprise, the real surprise was that there were some people that didn’t make the rollover trade on Verizon and somehow weren’t assigned.

The greatest likelihood is that was related to the fact that option contract holders
have until 5:30 PM to decide whether to exercise or not. For those that look at such ness after he market closed yesterday and it’s possible that convinced some contract holders that there was enough of a risk with shares opening even lower this morning that they were happy to just take their chances on the contracts, rather than taking the liability of a potential loss on shares.

So while some people were making those kinds of decisions after the closing bell, during trading hours on the other hand, it did appear as if there were some relative bargains to be had. While there is so much focus on the fall of Momentum stocks, it is hard to understand, on a fundamental basis, why so many other stocks would get taken along for the ride.

Ultimately, if there is a ride to be had, the sad truth is that almost everything gets taken along, but while so many are trying so hard to draw parallels to other bubbles, it just doesn’t seem that way.

While there may be risk ahead and while it may be a good idea to keep some cash on the side, it just doesn’t feel like the 15-20% kind of correction that some are calling for.

With 6 new purchases yesterday, I didn’t know how much more willing I would be this week to add to those positions and sink deeper into cash reserves, although some market stability, as we often see on Tuesdays, did prompt some more activity and also got a couple of new call contracts written on existing positions and on top of that, getting a chance to roll out to some future weeks.

Small victories.

For now, I would be content to let yesterday’s and today’s new positions be the only ones added this week and would be more than happy to see them go by the end of the week and hopefully help to continue that cycle of life that is the cash reserve, which makes all things possible.

Tomorrow brings another in an endless series of FOMC minute releases and so we can all sit and watch and see whether the market just takes an arbitrary direction yet again if nothing new is added into the economic mix.

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 8, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 8, 2014 (9:30 AM)

First of all, sorry for sending the rollover of Verizon Trading Alert so late yesterday.

As shares traded much higher in the latter part of the afternoon there was just no logical trade to be made. That changed in the final 20 minutes as shares started coming down a little from their day’s highs and an opportunity came to get some more premium and likely retain the dividend, although there were complicating considerations.

If you ever wanted to see what a “flight to safety” was all about, all you had to do was pay attention to Verizon in yesterday’s trading.

When the market started to further deteriorate in the early afternoon, making it begin to appear as if the day would be a lost cause and maybe a forerunner to something worse, Verizon did an about face at 12:25 PM.

It was probably no coincidence that today was its ex-dividend date, but shares soared well past their “threshold” value, that would have made early assignment of the April 11, 2014 $47.50 calls unlikely.

I was ambivalent about the prospects of rolling over the contract in order to retain the healthy dividend, especially since there was no $47.50 strike the following week and the week after was earnings week.

A quick calculation showed that the difference was an ROI of about 1.5%, based on the extra premium and keeping the dividend.

Since earnings are April 24th and the contract expires on April 25th, there’s also a chance that I’ll be looking to roll that contract over early, as well to mitigate earnings related risk.

However, what was especially interesting was that AT&T, which also went ex-dividend today, didn’t follow the same path. For a brief time in the mid-afternoon, it also started going higher as the market faltered, but then went back on a selling path.

The diverging behaviors yesterday probably sends some kind of message, but those messages typically have shorter and shorter half lives these days. Lately, even the fears of market corrections have very short half lives and deservedly so, because reality has borne out the fact they they are shallow and short lived of late.

Yesterday was not a very good day, but again, it was a day without much evidence of real panic, although the movement into Verizon may have been representative of an undercurrent of fear.

On the other hand, it did appear as if there were some relative bargains to be had. While there is so much focus on the fall of Momentum stocks, it is hard to understand, on a fundamental basis, why so many other stocks would get taken along for the ride.

Ultimately, if there is a ride to be had, the sad truth is that almost everything gets taken along, but while so many are trying so hard to draw parallels to other bubb
les, it just doesn’t seem that way.

While there may be risk ahead and while it may be a good idea to keep some cash on the side, it just doesn’t feel like the 15-20% kind of correction that some are calling for.

With 6 new purchases yesterday, I don’t know how much more willing I will be this week to add to those positions and sink deeper into cash reserves, although some market stability, as we often see on Tuesdays, might prompt some more activity.

For now, I would be content to let those new positions be the only ones added this week and would be more than happy to see them go by the end of the week and hopefully help to continue that cycle of life that is the cash reserve, which makes all things possible.

 

 









 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 7, 2014 (Close)

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 7, 2014 (Close)

Another weekend of nothing really happening to be of sufficient reason to move the markets to start the week. Nonetheless, the early impression was that there would be some very mild follow through to Friday’s very unexpected sell-off.

That would be wrong.

What also was wrong was the throng of voices who predicted, as the market was hitting it’s lows for the day, that the market would move even further lower going into the close. They were looking to see a test of the 1830 level on the S&P 500, which would have required about another 15 point drop, or about another 120 points on the DJIA.

Instead, things did tighten up a bit and for a very brief while even looked as if a triple digit loss would be erased.

With the turnaround in fortunes on Friday I felt very fortunate to have seen most of the anticipated assignments occur and have more cash on hand than when the week started, especially after having to dip into reserves to buy anything last week following only one assignment the prior week.

It’s far better to have the cash unencumbered by stock ownership when the market appears headed lower than having to go into reserves to put even more at risk. Recycling cash from assignments just doesn’t seem to psychologically carry the same level of risk, although it certainly does in reality,  where it counts.

While happy to have the cash, on the other hand, I was disappointed that some of the rollovers I felt fairly certain might get done, perhaps even turn into assignments, instead expired, leaving more uncovered positions that need to be looked after.

Still, not a bad way to start a week that begins with some added uncertainty that may be compounded as earnings begin anew this week and we get to see whether the weather has already been fully discounted in reporting for the past quarter.

Deep down you know that for some companies the bad weather excuse was simply an excuse. Some will take the opportunity with the current earnings reports to guide higher coming off a lower quarter and see their stocks rise and others will have to admit that there is something fundamentally wrong and not the weather at all. They will see their stocks drop.

Good luck trying to figure out which company will take which route.

Earnings season always requires the added attention to when the reports will be delivered. For those having been buy and hold investors it was predominantly earnings that made you wonder why you didn’t take profits sooner or made you wonder why you sold your shares so early. Rarely, if you were a long term holder, did earnings reports consistently move any individual stock in the same direction. One quarter’s nice advance may have been followed by another, but rarely a third and with it evaporation of those unrealized profits.

I used to hate earnings season. Now, it just means a l
ittle more work and trying to either avoid some positions or position yourself for whatever news may come your way and hope that whatever that news will be, it will be within reason.

That may be a little more challenging if there is any erosion in the market itself.

With cash near 40% to start the week the temptation to go shopping is definitely there. With a decent number of positions already having contracts expiring this Friday I would like to see any new purchases look at the possibility of going more forward, but that’s been easier to say lately than to do, as the premiums have been very low. I’ve been wanting to diversify in time for a few weeks now and haven’t had much luck in doing so. Friday’s drop did drive volatility a little higher so maybe there will be a better opportunity to do so this week.

What was interesting was that for some deep in the money strike levels for various stocks the premiums were in contango. That doesn’t happen very often and suggests that the options market was pricing in price drops going forward. Conceivably, someone looking to rollover a position at the same strike level would only have been able to do so at a net debit.

That’s not a very powerful motivator.

As with any market drop, especially after setting record highs, it’s only natural to wonder whether the drop was simply a blip or the start of something more omenous.

For the Momentum stocks that get so much attention the “omenous” seems to have already started.

Just look at the charts of SolarCity, Netflix, Amazon and LinkedIn, all from about March 19-20, 2014.

This morning that’s what I’ll likely be doing. Looking.

I’d like to see a little bit more of a sell-off before adding new positions, although some have taken enough of a decline, with no really obvious reason that it may be difficult to resist the opportunities.

It’s the age old battle of “Fear versus greed.” Only the week is new.

What surprised me is just how many new positions I did decide to open. The sell-off didn’t feel really terribly bad.

The only thing that did feel bad was watching everyone sell their stocks and rotate into what are thought to be safe and high yielding positions. Unfortunately, one of those was Verizon, which goes ex-dividend tomorrow. At about 12:25 PM it reversed its direction, going from well outside the possibility of being assigned early to likelihood of that happening. While I wanted to do the rollover to capture the dividend there just weren’t any good trades to be made, as it is one of those dividend arbitrage stocks that I referred to the other day. Trying to buy back the shares would have ended up being no different from offering to pay full value for the dividend the more deeply it was in the money.

About 15 minutes before the closing bell shares took a dip and there was an opportunity to get some scant premium through a rollover. I was, however, ambivalent about the trade as the April 25th contract expiration is a day after earnings are announced and I generally don’t like to be in that kind of position.

I did want the dividend, though.

In this case, it’s FOMO (fear of missing out) versus greed, and those two are really one and the same.







 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 7, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 7, 2014 (9:00 AM)

Another weekend of nothing really happening to be of sufficient reason to move the markets to start the week. Nonetheless, the early impression is that there’s some very mild follow through to Friday’s very unexpected sell-off.

With the turnaround in fortunes on Friday I felt very fortunate to have seen most of the anticipated assignments occur and have more cash on hand than when the week started, especially after having to dip into reserves to buy anything last week following only one assignment the prior week.

It’s far better to have the cash unencumbered by stock ownership when the market appears headed lower than having to go into reserves to put even more at risk. Recycling cash from assignments just doesn’t seem to psychologically carry the same level of risk, although it certainly does in reality,  where it counts.

While happy to have the cash, on the other hand, I was disappointed that some of the rollovers I felt fairly certain might get done, perhaps even turn into assignments, instead expired, leaving more uncovered positions that need to be looked after.

Still, not a bad way to start a week that begins with some added uncertainty that may be compounded as earnings begin anew this week and we get to see whether the weather has already been fully discounted in reporting for the past quarter.

Deep down you know that for some companies the bad weather excuse was simply an excuse. Some will take the opportunity with the current earnings reports to guide higher coming off a lower quarter and see their stocks rise and others will have to admit that there is something fundamentally wrong and not the weather at all. They will see their stocks drop.

Good luck trying to figure out which company will take which route.

Earnings season always requires the added attention to when the reports will be delivered. For those having been buy and hold investors it was predominantly earnings that made you wonder why you didn’t take profits sooner or made you wonder why you sold your shares so early. Rarely, if you were a long term holder, did earnings reports consistently move any individual stock in the same direction. One quarter’s nice advance may have been followed by another, but rarely a third and with it evaporation of those unrealized profits.

I used to hate earnings season. Now, it just means a little more work and trying to either avoid some positions or position yourself for whatever news may come your way and hope that whatever that news will be, it will be within reason.

That may be a little more challenging if there is any erosion in the market itself.

With cash near 40% to start the week the temptation to go shopping is definitely there. With a decent number of positions already having contracts expiring this Friday I would like to see any new purchases look at the possibility of going more forward, but that’s been easier to say lately than to do, as the premiums have been very low. I’ve been wanting to diversify in time for a few weeks now and haven’t had much luck in doing so. Friday’s drop did drive volatility a little higher so maybe there will
be a better opportunity to do so this week.

What was interesting was that for some deep in the money strike levels for various stocks the premiums were in contango. That doesn’t happen very often and suggests that the options market was pricing in price drops going forward. Conceivably, someone looking to rollover a position at the same strike level would only have been able to do so at a net debit.

That’s not a very powerful motivator.

As with any market drop, especially after setting record highs, it’s only natural to wonder whether the drop was simply a blip or the start of something more omenous.

For the Momentum stocks that get so much attention the “omenous” seems to have already started.

Just look at the charts of SolarCity, Netflix, Amazon and LinkedIn, all from about March 19-20, 2014.

This morning that’s what I’ll likely be doing. Looking.

I’d like to see a little bit more of a sell-off before adding new positions, although some have taken enough of a decline, with no really obvious reason that it may be difficult to resist the opportunities.

It’s the age old battle of “Fear versus greed.” Only the week is new.







 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dashboard – April 7 – 11, 2014

 

 

 

 

 

MONDAY:   The only two questions are whether there will be follow through to Friday or not and when to start putting recycled funds at risk. Not too much need to rush in this morning as the big money decides which way to start off the week.

TUESDAY:     Looks like a quiet day ahead. Can that be possible?

WEDNESDAY:  A flat pre-opening in advance of an unusually unheralded FOMC minutes report. Expecting little activity until the afternoon.

THURSDAY:    Maybe today is a relative day of rest following yesterday’s post-FOMC surge and before tomorrow’s expiration. Simply hoping to maintain chances of rollovers and assignments to end the week.

FRIDAY:  Strap on. JP Mporgan and Wells Fargo earnings seem to have little impact this morning in the pre-open trading. Hopefully saner minds prevail soon

 

 



                                                                                                                                           

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak Peek

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Weekend Update – April 6, 2014

This week started on such a positive note with the reassuring words of a dove, yet ended so harshly.

This time of the year it’s supposed to be the other way around with the lamb having the final word as months of a less threatening nature await ahead.

Instead, after Friday’s close, whatever optimism may have been generated by setting even more record highs earlier in the week, had given way to caution and perhaps preparation for some ill winds.

Back when I was in college it wasn’t meant as a compliment if you were referred to as being a “dove.” and the proverbial lamb was always being led to slaughter.  In fact, if you were called a “dove,” that was only in polite circles. Otherwise, the words used were far more descriptive and derisive.

By the same token, the doves out there may not have had the kindest of words for the hawks, but in nature, it’s usually the hawk that triumphs. In fact, recalling the recent mauling of a peace dove that had been just released by Pope Francis and some children, it didn’t really even require a hawk. A seagull and a lowly crow were enough for the task.

This week, though, it was the dove that ruled the day and set the tone for the week. Well, at least most of it, until its fragile nature beset itself.

A fragile market can be equally susceptible even to less formidable foes, as Friday’s sell-off had little basis and came on the day of the Employment Situation Report, which for the past 20 months or so has been strongly correlated to a higher moving market on the day of release and for the week as a whole. While the week as a whole did show an advance, the former correlation stood for only a short time before strong selling set in.

Whatever doubts there may have been regarding where Janet Yellen stood on that continuum from dove to hawk following her initial press conference, she made it clear that on issues of the Federal Reserve’s actions to help lower the unemployment rate, she was an unabashed dove and while there may be more dissenting voting members than before sitting on the Federal Reserve, she still controls the hawks, but probably keeps at least one eye wary at all times.

The stock market loved that re-affirmation of policy the way we love the beauty of a dove, even though like short sellers, we may privately relish its obliteration by a swooping predator hawk.

As usual, the week’s potential stock selections are classified as being in Traditional, Double Dip Dividend and Momentum categories, with no “PEE” selections this week (see details).

While this was an especially brutal week for stocks on the NASDAQ and particularly for many of those stocks that had borne a disproportionate amount of everyone’s attention as they moved ever higher, many others were included in whatever wrath took hold.

With earnings season beginning this coming week there may be some return to fundamentals, however, disappointments, particularly if weather hasn’t been fully factored in or discounted may further exploit market fragility.

MasterCard (MA) was one such casualty of the stampede. There was little to account for its 2.5% drop on Friday, bringing it to its 5 month low. The previous week, faced with some potentially adverse decisions regarding swipe fees it reacted well, yet this week it did otherwise without any new challenges being sent its way. While it goes ex-dividend on Monday it’s puny dividend isn’t something that’s likely to be missed by those entering into new positions as shares find themselves at a 5 month low. Believing that last week’s selling was overdone I would consider a slightly longer option contract and the use of an out of the money strike as a means to allow some time for price repair while collecting an option premium while waiting.

While not falling quite as much as MasterCard on Friday, shares of Starbucks (SBUX) also succumbed to selling pressure. While the past week was filled with news regarding other players entering into the breakfast marketplace, including offering free cups of coffee, there was really an absence of Starbucks specific news. While breakfast taco waffles may garner some attention, Starbucks has become as much a way of life as it has a product provider. It’s current price is one where it has shown considerable strength and it too may warrant the use of slightly longer term option contracts and an out of the money strike.

Apollo Education (APOL) was a stock that I highlighted last week as a possible earnings trade. As usual, I prefer those through the sale of well out of the money put contracts prior to earnings, especially if share price is trending downward prior to earnings. In Apollo’s case shares had instead shown strength prior to the earnings release, so I stayed away from selling puts at that time. After earnings shares did sustain a drop and I then sold some out of the money puts in the hope that the drop wouldn’t continue beyond another few strike levels. While there was almost a need to roll them over on Friday as the market was crumbling, Apollo shares showed resilience, even as the market did not.

While I still don’t have much confidence in the product it offers nor the manner in which it generates its revenues, that’s largely irrelevant, as it continues to offer some reasonable returns even if shares continue to experience some decline. Once again, however, I would most likely consider the sale of puts rather than an outright purchase of shares and concomitant sale of calls.

There’s probably very little that can be added to make a discussion of Herbalife (HLF) newsworthy, but when there is, it will really be worth paying attention. While Herbalife has been a good target of put sellers following the severe price drop in the wake of regulatory and legal investigations that are being escalated, it has recovered very nicely with the realization that any real news is likely to be in the distance. It too, is a position that I would likely consider entry through the sale of out of the money puts.

This week’s dividend stocks for consideration are two that
I haven’t owned for a while, as I’ve been waiting for them to return to more reasonable price levels. Sometimes the realization comes that waiting only prevents being an active participant. Aetna (AET) Abbott Labs (ABT) have long been absent from my portfolio despite continually thinking about adding them back.

With a large number of existing positions already going ex-dividend this week I’m not as anxious to add any additional ones. However, of those two, Abbott Labs is more appealing for having a higher dividend rate and for having already come off some recent price peaks. In need of additional health care sector stocks, Abbott also carries that personal appeal at this point in time. However, it reports earnings the following week so my preference, if purchasing shares, would be a quick holding and given its current option premium would even be willingly accepting of an early assignment.

Aetna has simply left me behind in the dust as I’ve been waiting for it to return to what I believed was a fair price, but apparently the market has long disagreed. While it may be some time until we all realize whether new healthcare mandates are a positive or negative for the insurers, the one thing that most everyone can agree is that the long term is always positive when your fee structure is highly responsive to actuarial data. Add to that an increasing interest rate environment and the future may be bright for insurers.

Among the shares that I had assigned this past week were Comcast (CMCSA) and Coach (COH). Following the week ending sell-off I was grateful to have as many assignments as there were, especially to replenish cash reserves in the event of buying opportunities ahead. However, among those assigned, these two are ones that I’m eager to re-incorporate into my portfolio.

Comcast, despite my personal feelings about the product and service, has just been a spectacular growth story and has had great guidance under the control of the Roberts family. My celebration of “Comcast Liberation Day” a few years ago didn’t mean that I would boycott share ownership or overlook its attributes as an investment. It’s recent 10% price drop in the past two months from its highs has offered an opportunity to find some more realistic entry points. While I’ve been following shares for quite some time, it only recently began offering weekly and expanded weekly options. For me, that was the signal, combined with the reduced share price to start initiating positions.  I envision a similar opportunity with Comcast shares on a serial basis as I have experienced with Coach.

Coach remains a stock that I feel like I could happily buy most week in and out as long as it’s trading in a $48-$54 range and have done so repeatedly when it has done so. Despite a near absence of positive news in almost two years and the company having been written off as a loser in the competitive wars, especially with Michael Kors (KORS), for those who can recognize that multiple small stock gains can be very meaningful it has been a consistent performer. With earnings approaching at the end of the month I would be less inclined to use longer term option contracts at this time, as Coach has had a recent history of sharp and unpredictable moves following earnings.

While Coach has been unable to do anything right in the eyes of many, until recently, Under Armour (UA) could do no wrong. WHile it’s still not clear whether the design of their latest skating wear for US Olympians was in any way related to their disappointing performance, Under Armour’s CEO, Kevin Plank, was a perfect study in how to present his company when under public scrutiny. 

While it received a downgrade about 3 weeks ago and subsequently fell more than 7% in that aftermath, it fell an additional 9% from that sentinel point late this week as it was carried along with the rest of the deluge. As with many others the selling was in the absence of substantive news.

With earnings season beginning this coming week, Under Armour is among those announcing early in the process on April 17, 2014. It’s volatility is commanding a health option premium at a time when many others are languishing, however, the risk may be compounded during the following week. For that reason, if considering the purchase of shares I would likely use a weekly contract and if necessary roll that over to a longer term contract in anticipation of that enhanced risk. As earnings approach, Under Armour may also turn out to be a potential earnings related trade through the sale of out of the money put options.

Finally, a number of years ago I was studying two stocks with an eye toward adding one to my regular rotation in need of another energy sector position. They were Anadarko (APC) and Apache (APA). For a while I would get their stock symbols confused and really had a difficult time discerning their differences. I still have no real idea of what those differences may be, but for some reason I gravitated toward Anadarko.

This week, that dalliance may have come to an end, at least for the time being, as my shares were assigned following an untimely and unexpected end to the Tronox litigation that was an unwelcome part of its Kerr McGee purchase.

Whatever positive comments I would normally make about Anadarko relative to its prospects for trading in a range and offering an attractive premium can now be transferred to Apache. The best part, though, is that Apache is approximately 10% below its recent high and can make me forget about Anadarko for now.

Traditional Stocks: Apache, Comcast, MasterCard, Starbucks

Momentum Stocks: Apollo Educational, Coach, Herbalife, Under Armour

Double Dip Dividend: Aetna (4/8), Abbott Labs (4/11)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: none

Remember, these are just guidelines for the coming week. The above selections may become actionable, most often coupling a share purchase with call option sales or the sale of covered put contracts, in adjustment to and consideration of market movements. The overriding objective is to create a healthy income stream for the week with reduction of trading risk.

Week in Review – March 31 – April 4, 2014

 

Option to Profit Week in Review
March 31 – April 4, 2014
 
NEW POSITIONS/STO NEW STO ROLLOVERS CALLS ASSIGNED/PUTS EXPIRED CALLS EXPIRED/PUTS ASSIGNED CLOSED
3 / 4 3 5 6  / 0 6   / 0 0

    

Weekly Up to Date Performance

March 31 – April 4 2014

New purchases beat the time adjusted S&P 500 this week by 0.7% and the unadjusted S&P 500 index by 0.2% during a week that once again saw no over-riding theme, pattern of trading nor news.

It started with a bang and ended with a bang and ended the week almost where it had started, but did set some records along the way, although left us with some quasiness.

The market showed an adjusted loss for the week of 0.1% but an unadjusted gain of 0.4% for the week, while new positions gained 0.6%.

By contrast, existing positions out-performed the market by 0.5% for the week after an unusually large 1.2% beat last week, deriving some further benefit from rollovers and newly covered positions. 

For positions closed in 2014 performance exceeded that of the S&P 500 by 1.6%. They were up 3.6% out-performing the market by 90.9%. So far, that wide beat continues, although I continually expect that margin to decrease and will do so once the market strings together a few strongly positive weeks.

Sooner or later I will learn that any week that offers an Employment Situation Report should have the proverbial farm bet on it.

Well, maybe not. So much for a sure thing.

At first it looked like today was going to be no different from the past 20 months or so of report releases that has seen not only the day of the report move in a positive direction, but the entire week, as well.

Well, one for two isn’t bad, as the bottom fell out from the market in the early afternoon after a week of strong market performance and more market records.

Those are always diffciult to keep up with when using a covered option strategy, which puts a limit on the upside.

But if you ever wanted an example of the perverse nature of this approach to investing, this was the day for it.

Going into today’s trading the new positions for the week were flat with the market on an adjusted basis and about 0.1% behind on an unadjusted basis (for those not aware of the difference, teh adjusted basis looks only at new purchases compared to teh market for the days at risk. So for ewxample, a new purchase made on a Thursday would not be compared to market performance on the preceding days, while a purchase on a Monday would be compared to the entire week.)

However, with the market turnaround so too did comparative performance turnaround for new and exisiting positions.

Not only did the new positions end up out-perfoming the market as a result of today’s strong sell off, but exisiting posit
ions, which were lagging for the week to date  by 0.5% yesterday, ended the week besting the market by 0.5%.

Hopefully your personal portfolios also showed that reversal of fortune.

Today, closing out the week was a very frustrating one for me, that is now made a little bit better as I look at the final numbers for the week.

Some of you know, through communication with me today that I had gremlins gnawing at every peice of my electronic world today.

My trading platform wasn’t automatically refreshing on its trades and I had lots of trial trades placed today, especially with Anadarko and Marathon Oil and spent lots of time re-booting, clearing out Java cache and with technical support.

Then, the miracle of text messaging was possessed today, as I received a number of old text messages today, including one from earlier in the week from my wife, in addition to not consistently receiving confrmation of my text alerts, even though others acknowledged having received them.

The real frustration this week has been the extremely low volatility which has made premiums very low in forward weeks. That’s especially been the case with thinking about trying to rollover DOH trades in Marathon Oil and the surprise of the week, Anadarko. WIth volatility low, the deeper in the money shares had much less excess built into forward premiums. At times during today’s trading the reward for some rollovers would have been a net debit, rather than a net credit, but still staying at the same strike price.

That’s not a good combination.

Ultimately, while rollovers may be possible they may come at a price. That is tying up money that could likely be used better elsewhere.

When it was all said and dome this week, I feel very fortunate to have seen quite a few assignments and rollovers, especially knowing that the freed up cash will be welcome after last week’s dearth of assignments.

After a sharp fall, such as today’s, I like the idea of having some cash in my pockets. Who knows, there may be some relative bargains on Monday and the money to spend on them. That’s not a bad combination, but there’s also the option of holding on to some of it, just in case.

 

 

 

  

     

This week’s details may be seen in the Weekly Performance spreadsheet * or in th
e PDF file, as well as as in the summary.below

(Note: Duplicate mention of positions reflects different priced lots):



New Positions Opened:  BBY, BMY, GPS

Puts Closed in order to take profits:  none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the next weekly cycle:  BMY, MOS

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into extended weekly cycle:  none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the monthly cycle:  FDO

Calls Rolled Over, taking profits, into a future monthly cycle: none

Calls Rolled Up, taking net profits into same cyclenone

New STO:  C, FDO, TGT

Put contracts sold and still open: none

Put contracts expired: APOL

Put contract rolled over: none

Long term call contracts sold:  none

Calls Assigned:   APC, BBY, CHK, CMCSA, COH, MRO

Calls Expired:   C, EBAY, FCX, FDO, LULU, MA

Puts Assigned:  none

Stock positions Closed to take profits:  none

Stock positions Closed to take losses: none

Calls Closed to Take Profits: none

Ex-dividend Positions:  CSCO (4/1 $0.19), BMY (4/2 $0.36), CMCSA (43/31 $0.22), PBR (4/3 $0.36)

Ex-dividend Positions Next Week:  GPS (4/7 $0.22), MA (4/7 $0.11), VZ (4/8 $0.53), DRI (4/8 $0.5
5), FCX (4/11 $0.31), WFM (4/9 $0.12)

 

 

For the coming week the existing positions have lots that still require the sale of contracts:   AGQ, C, CLF, EBAY, FCX, FDO, GM,  IP, JCP, LULU, MCP, MA, MOS,  NEM, PBR, PM, RIG, WFM, WLT, WY (See “Weekly Performance” spreadsheet or PDF file)



* If you don’t have a program to read or modify spreadsheets, you can download the OpenOffice Suite at no cost.



Daily Market Update – April 4, 2014

 

 

Daily Market Update – April 4, 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:

Assignment: APC, BBY, CHK, CMCSA, COH, GM, MRO

Rollover:  EBAY, FCX, HFC, MA

ExpirationAPOL (puts), C, FDO, LULU

 

Trades, if any will be attempted to be made prior to 3:30 PM {EDT)