Week in Review – May 25 – 29, 2015

 

Option to Profit

Week in Review

 

May 25 – 29,  2015

 

NEW POSITIONS/STO NEW STO ROLLOVERS CALLS ASSIGNED/PUTS EXPIRED CALLS EXPIRED/PUTS ASSIGNED CLOSED
0 / 0 0 1 1  /  0 0  / 0 0

    

Weekly Up to Date Performance

May 25 – 29, 2015

This was a really very forgettable week. Last week it was just forgettable. This week took it to an extreme that I hadn’t experienced before.

There were no new positions opened for the week, representing the third of fourth time that has occurred in over 3 years. But to make things worse, there was only a single expiring position.

In what was a terrible week, overall, the unadjusted and adjusted S&P 500 ended the week having gone 0.9% lower.

Lots closed in 2015 continue to out-perform the market. They are an average of 5.2% higher, while the comparable time adjusted S&P 500 average performance has been 1.5% higher. That 3.7% difference represents a 256.6% performance differential.  That’s too large to be sustained, but I’ve been saying that for a while, including much of 2014.

I knew a few weeks ago that this was likely to be a quiet week, but had no clue just how quiet it would be.

With only one position set to expire this week and with premiums even lower due to the holiday shortened week, there wasn’t going to be much opportunity to work with existing positions, especially as the market was so indecisive.

With earnings no longer driving the market and interest rate concerns back in vogue, there’s not too much that looks as if it wants to push the market any higher, but that has been the prevailing opinion so many times over the past few years.

With it getting more and more rare to see a meaningful correction, we’ve tended to over-inflate the importance of even the smallest and inconsequential pullbacks.

Most, like this week, have been nothing more than minor hiccoughs on the way higher

With cash a little higher as a result of an assignment this week and no new purchases, I’m anxious to add some more positions as the new week opens, but am equally anxious not to get too anxious about doing so.

With a small number of positions set to expire next week, but a larger number to end the month in 3 weeks, any new positions next week are most likely going to look at either next week or the following week’s expirations.

As this week produced virtually no income, at least next week has a large number of positions going ex-dividend, and hopefully some opportunity to either add to the cash reserve or generate some needed income.

Next week will be an Employment Situation report on Friday and maybe there may be some fear re-introduced if it is going to offer a mumber that is deemed to be too good.

For now, I would welcome getting the pain of any interest rate increase out of the way so that we could back back to actually focusing on what’s going well in the economy and how good news should be treated as good news.

Wouldn’t that be nice for a change?

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

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



New Positions Opened:   none

Puts Closed in order to take profits:  none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the next weekly cycle: none

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into extended weekly cycle:  GDX (6/12)

Calls Rolled over, taking profits, into the monthly cycle: none

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

Calls Rolled Up, taking net profits into same cyclenone

New STO:  none

Put contracts expired: none

Put contracts rolled over: none

Long term call contracts sold:  none

Calls Assigned: LXK

Calls Expired:  none

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: RIG (5/27 $0.15), ANF (5/29 $0.20)


Ex-dividend Positions Next Week
: HAL (6/1 $0.19), JOY (6/2 $0.20), MOS (6/3 $0.28), BAC (6/3 $0.05), COH (6/3 $0.34), HFC (6/3 $0.33)

 

 

For the coming week the existing positions have lots that still require the sale of contracts:   AGQ, ANF, CHK, CLF,  FAST, FCX, HAL, .INTC, JCP, JOY, LVS,  MCP, MOS, RIG, WFM, WLT (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 – May 29, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 29, 2015  (8:00 AM)

 

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

It was hard to understand what happened on Tuesday, just as it was hard to understand exactly what happened yesterday.

 

The following trade outcomes are possible today:

 

Assignments:  none

Rollovers:  none

Expirations:   none

 

The following were ex-dividend this week:  ANF (5/29 $0.20), RIG (5/27 $0.15)

The following will be ex-dividend next week:  HAL (6/1 $0.18), JOY (6/2 $0.20), MOS (6/2 $0.275), BAC (6/3 $0.05), COH (6/3 $0.34), HFC (6/3 $0.33)

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

Daily market Update – May 28, 2015 (Close)

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 28, 2015  (Close)

 

It was hard to understand what happened on Tuesday, just as it was hard to understand exactly what happened yesterday.

Yesterday’s market wasn’t exactly an equal and opposite reaction, but at least it was noticeable in the correction to the previous day.

It still, however, doesn’t leave us anywhere other than continuing to be on that big piece of plywood delicately balanced on the head of a nail.

The pre-open futures was again poised to offer virtually nothing in the form of direction as I was getting ready to scan positions this morning. Today looked as if it would be bringing me one more step closer to a week with no trades, other than the early assignment of one position.

But somehow that market vectors Gold Miners ETF got yet another rollover. That as its 20 trade overall in the past 6 months.

While I do like the additional cash, it has been a frustrating week. Although I wasn’t expecting to make many trades and already aware that there was little to be rolled over this holiday shortened week, the very few trades that I’ve tried to make haven’t materialized. Even the one rollover couldn’t get executed yesterday.

With now just one day left in this week my expectations are low, but it will be very interesting to see how tomorrow’s GDP figure will look, as well as how the markets will react to it.

Any suggestion that the economy is heating up, or is on a stronger path than had been earlier indicated, is likely to be met with a bad market reaction. Following Tuesday’s sell off, it may not take much to tip over that perfectly balanced sheet of plywood.

With this week being a virtual wasteland and no activity, my eyes are on next week and hoping to be able to do something with the cash on hand as well as something with the few positions already set to expire next Friday.

Hopefully the next couple of days will show some more consistency and allow some more strategic planning. The back and forth that we’ve seen over the past few weeks, while occasionally setting some new record highs, isn’t the kind that creates confidence, nor does it create a strong support level for the market to climb even higher.

Still, as unhealthy as it seems, you do have to admire the way the market has been able to stick in and respond to every challenge with a new effort to recover.

I’m willing to do that, but I’d be much more willing if I could be a much more active participant.

That doesn’t look to be the case today or maybe not even tomorrow, but there’s always next week. At least then we have an Employment Situation Report and some FOMC Governors speaking to liven things up a little and maybe even get the futures back into the game.

 

 

 

 

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Daily Market Update – May 28, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 28, 2015  (8:00 AM)

 

It was hard to understand wat happened on Tuesday, just as it was hard to understand exactly what happened yesterday.

Yesterday’s market wasn’t exactly an equal and opposite reaction, but at least it was noticeable in the correction to the previous day.

It still, however, doesn’t leave us anywhere other than continuing to be on that big piece of plywood delicately balanced on the head of a nail.

The pre-open futures is again poised to offer virtually nothing in the form of direction as getting ready to scan positions this morning. Today brings me one more step closer to a week with no trades, other than the early assignment of one position.

While I do like the additional cash, it has been a frustrating week. Although I wasn’t expecting to make many trades and already aware that there was little to be rolled over this holiday shortened week, the very few trades that I’ve tried to make haven’t materialized. Even the one rollover couldn’t get executed yesterday.

With just two days left in this week my expectations are low, but it will be very interesting to see how tomorrow’s GDP figure will look, as well as how the markets will react to it.

Any suggestion that the economy is heating up, or is on a stronger path than had been earlier indicated, is likely to be met with a bad market reaction. Following Tuesday’s sell off, it may not take much to tip over that perfectly balanced sheet of plywood.

With this week being a virtual wasteland and no activity, my eyes are on next week and hoping to be able to do something with the cash on hand as well as something with the few positions already set to expire next Friday.

Hopefully the next couple of days will show some more consistency and allow some more strategic planning. The back and forth that we’ve seen over the past few weeks, while occasionally setting some new record highs, isn’t the kind that creates confidence, nor does it create a strong support level for the market to climb even higher.

Still, as unhealthy as it seems, you do have to admire the way the market has been able to stick in and respond to every challenge with a new effort to recover.

I’m willing to do that, but I’d be much more willing if I could be a much more active participant.

That doesn’t look to be the case today or maybe not even tomorrow, but there’s always next week. At least then we have an Employment Situation Report and some FOMC Governors speaking to liven things up a little and maybe even get the futures back into the game.

 

 

 

 

,

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 27, 2015 (Close)

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 27, 2015  (Close)

 

It’s still hard to understand what exactly happened yesterday.

Sometimes on the first day back after a holiday weekend of the kind that’s not celebrated elsewhere in the world, our markets can have a gap up or gap down if there was some kind of large move in European or Asian markets.

But that wasn’t the case. It was a quiet 3 days all over the world and our own futures market was predicting more of the same.

With most major companies having already reported earnings, the price of oil stabilizing and the US Dollar getting a little less precious in foreign exchanges there really wasn’t much threatening in the air, other than the fact that we were right near all time highs and haven’t had a real correction in 3 years.

Maybe that’s enough.

Within minutes of the opening bell the market began telling a very different story from what the futures had portended. While those muted futures performances don’t necessarily have great predictive value, it is unusual to see the market diverge so strongly and so quickly from the futures.

The real emphasis on that last line goes on just how quickly the market turned negative and turned its back on the futures.

With most of my new position trades typically occurring on Mondays and Tuesdays and most rollovers usually on Thursdays and Fridays, this really has the makings for being a very unusual week.

While there have been two or three weeks over the past 3 years that have not had any new positions opened, there has never been a week without either a new position being opened or some position being rolled over.

This could be that week.

The only positive thing about yesterday was that volatility, which has been plummeting lately, at least got a little bit of a boost. Even so, it still has a long way to go to make things interesting again.

This morning’s futures were again looking as if it would be a quiet day, this time with a little bias to the upside.

Today simply proved to be another example of how those futures, especially when they’re muted in their expression, are pretty meaningless.

All they show is that the professional money, the kind that’s supposed to be smarter than the other kind of money, doesn’t really know what it’s doing on certain days.

For me, the relative calm before the market opened didn’t feel very inviting. As with previous weeks I would still like to see the cash reserve pile being bigger than it is at the moment, especially if there are some more days like yesterday ahead.

With the early assignment of Lexmark this morning to capture its dividend, I do feel a little better about having some more cash available, though, especially since it meant keeping the entire month’s option premium and still having another 3 weeks to put that money to work. But even then, I’d like to see some more cash in that pile.

Unless there’s an unexpected purchase opportunity with an expiration for this week, that’s not too likely, so without much to focus on for this week, as there’s only one position possibly up for assignment or rollover, the focus shifts to next week. Even with that in mind, I kept looking for anything that could be justified, but had a hard time talking myself into any trades.

At least there are already some positions set to expire next week and maybe between now and then there may be a little more clarity ahead and some more clear signal as to whether it makes sense to dip into cash.

Not to mix metaphors too much, but while that cash does burn a hole in my pocket, I’d rather feel that heat than see it go down the drain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 27, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 27, 2015  (8:00 AM)

 

It’s still hard to understand what exactly happened yesterday.

Sometimes on the first day back after a holiday weekend of the kind that’s not celebrated elsewhere in the world, our markets can have a gap up or gap down if there was some kind of large move in European or Asian markets.

But that wasn’t the case. It was a quiet 3 days all over the world and our own futures market was predicting more of the same.

With most major companies having already reported earnings, the price of oil stabilizing and the US Dollar getting a little less precious in foreign exchanges there really wasn’t much threatening in the air, other than the fact that we were right near all time highs and haven’t had a real correction in 3 years.

Maybe that’s enough.

Within minutes of the opening bell the market began telling a very different story from what the futures had portended. While those muted futures performances don’t necessarily have great predictive value, it is unusual to see the market diverge so strongly and so quickly from the futures.

The real emphasis on that last line goes on just how quickly the market turned negative and turned its back on the futures.

With most of my new position trades typically occurring on Mondays and Tuesdays and most rollovers usually on Thursdays and Fridays, this really has the makings for being a very unusual week.

While there have been two or three weeks over the past 3 years that have not had any new positions opened, there has never been a week without either a new position being opened or some position being rolled over.

This could be that week.

The only positive thing about yesterday was that volatility, which has been plummeting lately, at least got a little bit of a boost. Even so, it still has a long way to go to make things interesting again.

This morning’s futures were again looking as if it would be a quiet day, this time with a little bias to the upside, but the relative calm doesn’t feel very inviting. As with previous weeks I would still like to see the cash reserve pile being bigger than it is at the moment, especially if there are some more days like yesterday ahead.

With the early assignment of Lexmark this morning to capture its dividend, I do feel a little better about having some more cash available, though, especially since it meant keeping the entire month’s option premium and still having another 3 weeks to put that money to work. But even then, I’d like to see some more cash in that pile.

Unless there’s an unexpected purchase opportunity with an expiration for this week, that’s not too likely, so without much to focus on for this week, as there’s only one position possibly up for assignment or rollover, the focus shifts to next week.

AT least there are already some positions set to expire next week and maybe between now and then there may be a little more clarity ahead and some more clear signal as to whether it makes sense to dip into cash.

Not to mix metaphors too much, but while that cash does burn a hole in my pocket, I’d rather feel that heat than see it go down the drain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 26, 2015 (Close)

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 26, 2015  (Close)

 

Well, today was certainly a surprise.

Looking at the pre-open futures every indication was that this holiday shortened week was going to get off on the same foot that reflected all of last week.

If that was going to be the case it was destined to be another very listless trading session.

But it didn’t take long for things to deteriorate. Within about 10 minutes the market was already down 100 points and with no real reason to account neither for it nor for the additional 100 points that was tacked on.

The question, at some point, and maybe that point started this morning, was just how long the market can essentially do nothing as it sits right at all time highs. That’s basically like trying to balance an 8 foot length piece of plywood on the head of a pin. For a split second there may be an equilibrium, but you just know that it can’t last.

The only difference is that the plywood can only drop and the market doesn’t necessarily need a reason, such as the suspension of gravity and the laws of nature, to go higher.

There’s not too much economic news this week, although there are a few that can give the FOMC some reason to begin the interest rate hiking process.

This week there are Durable Goods, New Home Sales, Jobless Claims and perhaps, most importantly, Friday’s GDP.

This morning none of those were really on anyone’s mind. Maybe only the weight of the precarious piece of plywood was dangling over investor’s heads enough to stir some nerves.

With today finally out of the way, there is still some things to consider as the week progresses, most notably as it comes to its close.

With all of the controversy surrounding the accuracy of the previous winter months GDP reports, this Friday’s release may cause a re-set in thinking. That’s because the rate of change may now take on a very different character as the results of those winter months are more closely re-scrutinized.

The FOMC probably doesn’t care where the economy has been, but they do care about where it’s going and how fast it’s getting there. With what may have been faulty Q1 data, it’s really difficult to then assess the velocity or acceleration rate of change.

But that’s their problem and I’m sure that they’ll deal with it in a measured and rational way.

Not too many people are still thinking that a rate hike might be announced at the June meeting, but all it may take is a couple of corroborating reports to suggest that things are heating up after the winter and there could still easily be room for a small interest rate increase in the coming month.

That would cast a near term pall on markets, as the debate had shifted to whether the rate hike would be coming in September or maybe even waiting until 2016.

But that leaves the rest of us to wonder whether much of the foundation of the market’s recent strengt
h, that is the expectation that higher interest rates weren’t coming too soon, may prove to have been a misguided expectation.

As the market does started the morning right below all time closing highs and with cash still lower than I would like, I’m probably not going on a spending spree this week. However, if I’m going to meet the weekly goal of generating an income stream, that’s going to require some new purchases.

I’m not a big fan of having competing interests in life, but this is one of those time when the desire to conserve cash is in conflict with the need to generate cash.

That’s because what I mentioned a few weeks ago as a possibility has become the reality. As I mentioned a few weeks ago this Friday’s expiration could have ended up being one with no expiring positions and that’s almost the case, with only the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF set to expire this week.

With virtually no positions to rollover there are no income producing positions unless new ones are added.

With only 4 days of time reflected in this week’s option premiums there may be reason to look at extended weekly expirations for any new positions that may be opened and simply adding to the small handful that are already set to expire next week.

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 26, 2015

 

 

 

Daily Market Update – May 26, 2015  (8:45 AM)

 

Looking at the pre-open futures every indication is that this holiday shortened week is going to get off on the same foot that reflected all of last week.

If that’s going to be the case it’s going to be another very listless trading session.

The question, at some point, becomes just how long the market can essentially do nothing as it sits right at all time highs. That’s basically like trying to balance an 8 foot length piece of plywood on the head of a pin. For a split second there may be an equilibrium, but you just know that it can’t last.

The only difference is that the plywood can only drop and the market doesn’t necessarily need a reason, such as the suspension of gravity and the laws of nature, to go higher.

There’s not too much economic news this week, although there are a few that can give the FOMC some reason to begin the interest rate hiking process.

This week there are Durable Goods, New Home Sales, Jobless Claims and perhaps, most importantly, Friday’s GDP.

With all of the controversy surrounding the accuracy of the previous winter months GDP reports, this Friday’s release may cause a re-set in thinking. That’s because the rate of change may now take on a very different character as the results of those winter months are more closely re-scrutinized.

The FOMC probably doesn’t care where the economy has been, but they do care about where it’s going and how fast it’s getting there. With what may have been faulty Q1 data, it’s really difficult to then assess the velocity or acceleration rate of change.

But that’s their problem and I’m sure that they’ll deal with it in a measured and rational way.

Not too many people are still thinking that a rate hike might be announced at the June meeting, but all it may take is a couple of corroborating reports to suggest that things are heating up after the winter and there could still easily be room for a small interest rate increase in the coming month.

That would cast a near term pall on markets, as the debate had shifted to whether the rate hike would be coming in September or maybe even waiting until 2016.

But that leaves the rest of us to wonder whether much of the foundation of the market’s recent strength, that is the expectation that higher interest rates weren’t coming too soon, may prove to have been a misguided expectation.

As the market does sit right below all time closing highs and with cash still lower than I would like, I’m probably not going on a spending spree this week. However, if I’m going to meet the weekly goal of generating an income stream, that’s going to require some new purchases.

I’m not a big fan of having competing interests in life, but this is one of those time when the desire to conserve cash is in conflict with the need to generate cash.

That’s because what I mentioned a few weeks ago as a
possibility has become the reality. As I mentioned a few weeks ago this Friday’s expiration could have ended up being one with no expiring positions and that’s almost the case, with only the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF set to expire this week.

With virtually no positions to rollover there are no income producing positions unless new ones are added.

With only 4 days of time reflected in this week’s option premiums there may be reason to look at extended weekly expirations for any new positions that may be opened and simply adding to the small handful that are already set to expire next week.

 

 

Dashboard – May 25 – 29, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

SELECTIONS

MONDAY:   HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY

TUESDAY:  Looks like markets will start the shortened trading week right where they left off last week and will be doing just about nothing. That can’t last, however, when perched at all time highs

WEDNESDAY: The pre-open futures are pointing to a mildly positive bias this morning, but a lot of good it did as a predictor of yesterday’s trading. Lots of people are still scratching their heads over what caused such a swift turnaround from the futures the moment the market opened for trading

THURSDAY:  After 2 days in which the pre-open futures foretold nothing, today is another in a series of lackluster openings being poretended

FRIDAY: Finally, an end to this week of no trades and no meaning, as the pre-open futures again point at more of the same.

 

 

 


 



 

                                                                                                                                           

Today's TradesCash-o-Meter

 

 

 





 “SNEAK PEEK AT NEXT WEEK” APPEARS ON FRIDAYS

Sneak PeekPie Chart Distribution

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Summary

  

Weekend Update – May 24, 2015

There was a time, a long time ago, that people actually made telephone calls and the ones on the receiving end didn’t have Caller ID to screen those calls.

Back in those days, without any screening device, there were lots of wrong numbers. Sometimes, if it got to the point that you actually began to recognize the voice on the other end, those wrong numbers could become annoying. Of course, the time of the day also played a role in just how annoying those wrong numbers could be and they always seemed to come at the worst of times.

For example, just imagine how bad the timing might be if you discovered that the wrong GDP numbers had played a role, maybe a major role, in helping stock markets move higher in the belief that interest rate increases weren’t going to be imminent.

Somehow, that’s not as funny as the intentionally wrong number prank phone calls made by Bart Simpson.

Although anyone could make the honest mistake of dialing a wrong number, in the back of your mind you always wondered what kind of an idiot doesn’t know how to dial? After all, it was just a simple question of transposing numbers into action.

Otherwise, numbers were a thing of beauty and simply reflected the genius of mankind in their recognition and manipulations.

For many years I loved arithmetic and then I learned to really enjoy mathematics. The concept that “numbers don’t lie” had lots of meaning to me until I learned about interpretative statistics and came to realize that numbers may not lie, but people can coerce them into compromising themselves to the point that the numbers themselves are blamed.

As we’ve all been on an FOMC watch trying to predict when a data driven Federal Reserve would begin the process of increasing rates it’s a little disconcerting to learn that one of the key input numbers, the GDP, may not have been terribly accurate.

In other words, the numbers themselves may have lied.

As those GDP reports had been coming in over the past few months and had been consistently disappointing to our expectations, many wondered how they could possibly be reflecting a reality that seemed to be so opposite to what logic had suggested would be the case.

But faced with the sanctity of numbers it seemed a worthless exercise to question the illogical.

While many of us are wary of economic statistics that we see coming from overseas, particularly what may be self-serving numbers from China, there’s basically been a sense that official US government reports, while subject to revision, are at least consistent in their accuracy or inaccuracy, as the methodology is non-discriminatory and applied equally.

It really comes as a blow to confidence when the discovery is made that the methodology itself may be flawed and that it may not be a consistently applied flaw.

The word for that, one that we heard all week long, was “seasonality.”

The realization that the first quarter GDP was inaccurate puts last month’s FOMC minutes released this past week in a completely different light. While the FOMC Governors may not have been inclined to increase rates as early as this upcoming June’s meeting, that inclination may at least have been partially based upon erroneous data. That erroneous data, although perhaps isolated to a particular time of the year, therefore, may also impact the rate of change observed in subsequent periods. Those projected trends are the logical extension of discrete data points and may also contribute to policy decisions.

But not so readily once you find that you may have been living a lie.

Next week, a holiday shortened trading week, ends with the release of the GDP and may leave us with the question of just what to do with that data.

This past Friday, Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen gave an address and didn’t offer any new insights into the thoughts of the FOMC, particularly as the issue of the integrity of data was concerned.

With the S&P 500 resting for the week at what may either be a resistance level or a support level, what she also didn’t do was to offer stock market bulls a reason to believe that a dovish FOMC would take a June interest rate increase off the table to offer a launching pad.

As the market sits right below its record closing highs and with earnings season begin to wind down, taking those always questionable numbers away with them until the next earnings season begins in less than 2 months, all we have left is the trust in the consistency and accuracy of economic reports. However, taking a look at both the Shanghai and Hang Seng Indexes, maybe questionable numbers isn’t such a bad thing, after all.

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

Coach (NYSE:COH) and Michael Kors (NYSE:KORS) have been very much linked in people’s minds ever since Coach’s very disappointing sales and earnings report in July 2013. At that time the storyline was that Coach was staid and uninteresting and had been supplanted in all ways by Kors.

To a large degree that mindset still continues, despite Kors steep descent from its highs of 2014. What has gone unnoticed, however, is that other than for the 6 month period after that disastrous earnings report in 2013, Coach shares have actually out-performed Kors through most of the time thereafter.

Coach didn’t fare terribly well after its most recent earnings report and its price has since returned back to where it had built a comfortable base. With an ex-dividend date upcoming the following week I think that I’m ready to add shares to a more expensive pre-existing lot that has been waiting for more than a year to be assigned and the past 8 months to be joined by another lot to help alleviate its misery.

With that upcoming dividend and with this week being a shortened trading week and offering lessened option premiums, I would likely consider a purchase of Coach shares and the sale of an extended weekly option, probably also seeking some capital gains on shares by using an out of the money strike price.

Kors on the other hand is reporting earnings this week and the option market is implying a 7.5% price movement. While not a very big differential, a 1% ROI may be achieved with the sale of a weekly put option if the shares fall less than 8.3% next week. If willing to add an additional week to the put contract expiration that would allow a fall of almost 10% before being at risk of assignment of shares.

Normally I don’t like to go more than a week at a time on a put sale unless needing to rollover a put that is deep in the money in order to prevent or delay assignment. However, the premiums this week are somewhat lower because of the holiday and that means that risk is a little bit higher if selling puts with a particular ROI as a goal in mind.

While Coach has been resistant to being buried and cast away, it’s hard to find a company that has had more requiems written for it than GameStop (NYSE:GME).

With game makers having done well of late there may be reason to delay a public performance of any requiem for yet another quarter as GameStop continues to confound investors who have long made it a very popular short position.

Unlike Kors, which pays no dividend, I do factor a dividend into the equation if selling puts in advance or after earnings are reported. GameStop reports earnings this week and will be ex-dividend sometime during the June 2015 option cycle.

With the option market having an implied price move of 6.2% as earnings are released, a 1% ROI can be achieved with the sale of a weekly put if shares don’t fall more than 6.8%. However, if faced with assignment, I would try to rollover the put options unless the ex-dividend date is announced and it is in the coming week. In that event, I would take assignment and consider the sale of calls with the added goal of also capturing the dividend.

I’ve been waiting a long time to re-purchase shares of Baxter International (NYSE:BAX) and always seem drawn to it as it is about to go ex-dividend. This week’s ex-dividend date arrives at a time when shares are approaching their yearly low point. I tend to like that combination particularly when occurring in a company that is otherwise not terribly volatile nor prone to surprises.

As with some other trades this week I might consider bypassing the weekly option and looking at an extended weekly option to try to offset some of the relatively higher transaction costs occurring in a holiday shortened week.

Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) is also ex-dividend this week and seems to have found stability after some tumultuous trading after its January 2015 earnings report. With some upcoming technology and telecom conferences over the next 2 weeks there may be some comments or observations to shake up that stability between now and its next earnings report. However, if open to that risk, shares do offer both an attractive option premium and dividend.

With shares currently situated closer to its yearly low than its high it is another position that I would consider selling an extended weekly option and seeking to also get some capital gains on shares by using an out of the money strike price.

Finally, retail hasn’t necessarily been a shining beacon of light and whatever suspicions may surround the GDP, there’s not too much question that retailers haven’t posted the kind of revenues that would support a consumer led expansion of the economy, although strangely shoes may be exception.

One of the more volatile of the shoe companies has been Deckers Outdoor (NYSE:DECK) and if the option market is any judge, it is again expected to be volatile as it rep
orts earnings this week.

The option market is implying a 10.5% price move in one direction or another this coming week as earnings are released and guidance provided.

Meanwhile, a 1% ROI could potentially be achieved from the sale of a put option if the shares don’t fall more than 15.4%. That’s quite a differential and may be enough to mitigate the risk in the shares of a company that are very prone to significant ups and downs.

As with Kors, there is no dividend to factor into any decision if faced with the need to either embrace or avoid assignment. In that event, I would likely try to roll the put options over to a forward week in an attempt to outlast any decline in share price and wait out price recovery, while still generating premium income.

That sounds good on paper and when it does work out that way, adding up all of those premiums on a piece of paper reminds you how beautiful simple numbers can still be.

Traditional Stocks: none

Momentum Stocks: Coach

Double Dip Dividend: Baxter International (5/28), Qualcomm (6/1)

Premiums Enhanced by Earnings: Deckers (5/28), GameStop (5/28 PM), Kors (5/27 AM)

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.