Friday, November 23, 2007

Black Friday

Today is Black Friday. It is the day after Thanksgiving and the day Americans starts their Christmas shopping. Typically, it is the start of the period where retail stores make money to cover the losses throughout the year. If the retail stores do not rake in much sales with good margin, then it is likely that the stores would lose money for the whole year. The sales figures on Black Friday could move the market especially during this period where there is a huge uncertainty whether consumers will minimise buying discretionary items and start a recession.

The sales figures should be coming in by Monday. However, analysts will start looking at the physical queues at retail stores on Black Friday to anticipate the actual sales figures.

As the market close early today, the market volume should be thin.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

FRE & FNM update

FRE & FNM gapped down at opening on Wednesday. Subsequently, it rally up and did not break the session low. Since I played Dec Options (front month) I decided to take whatever profits that are left by the end of the day. I would lose more on time-value of the options if I keep it overnight as Thursday was a Thanksgiving holiday.

Closed my FRE Dec 25 Put at $3.00 (Profit = 87.5% over 2 market days)
Closed my FNM Dec 30 Put at $3.80 (Profit = 2.7% over 2 market days)

I had left both my credit spreads overnight. Both are still positive since the time-value of the options had dropped.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

FRE & FNM

Yesterday, I heard from CNBC that FRE had a very bad earnings results . I had been monitoring the housing market. Checked both FRE and FNM. It was down for more than 20% at pre-market. Watched the stocks when the market opens. Both gapped up. Since I expect the stocks to go down further, I waited for the stocks to complete its retracement, typically 50% or 61.8% of Fibonacci level (measured from yesterday's opening price and the previous day closing price.)

.................FRE...................................................... FNM

Made the following entries:
  • FRE Dec 25 Put @$1.60 (when FRE was $28.89)
  • FRE Bear Call Spread Dec 25/30 Call @$2.80 (when FRE was $28.59)
  • FNM Bear Call Spread Dec 30/35 Call @$2.50 (when FNM was $32.00)
  • FNM Dec 30 Put @$3.70 (when FNM was $29.82)
Both the Bear Call Spreads are sold in-the-money. Both straight Puts play are bought out-of-money.

Closed part of my FRE Dec 25 Put at $2.65 after lunch time (not at the best price for the day though). I thought the market would continue its slide after 2:00pm (EST). It happened that the market reversed and enjoyed a short rally. Anyway, it was good money earning 65.6% from that play.

I have kept the rest of my play for today. So far, the market is still in my favour.

Note: When a stock tanked like FRE and FNM yesterday, the time value for the options increased substantially. It would be good to sell the options (in my play, I played the credit spreads). The time value would drop substantially by the end of the day.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Level 3 Assets at MS, GS, LEH, BSC, C, MER

With the current credit crisis in the U.S., it is important to monitor the following development.

Extracted from Online Trading Academy email newsletter (free subscription).
"The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is the referee for accounting practices. They recently issued a new rule which will be implemented November 15. Essentially, Statement 157 requires a financial firm to divide its assets into three categories called simply enough, Level 1, Level 2 and Level 3.

Under FASB terminology, Level 1 means assets that can be marked-to-market, where an asset's worth is based on a real price, like a stock quote. Level 2 is mark-to-model, an estimate based on observable inputs which is used when no quoted prices are available. You can go get several bids and average them, or base your assumption on what similar assets sold for.

Level 3 values are based on "unobservable" inputs reflecting companies' "own assumptions" about the way assets would be priced. That would be market talk for best guess, or in some cases SWAG (as in Simple Wild-***ed Guess.)

.... It seems that some companies have far more Level 3 assets than they have capital. Take a look at these six banks which have already posted their Level 3 assets ahead of the deadline:

  • Morgan StanleyEquity base: $35 billionLevel three assets: $88 billionLevel 3 to equity ratio: 251%
  • Goldman SachsEquity base: $39 billionLevel 3 assets: $72 billionLevel 3 to equity ratio: 185%
  • LehmanBrothersEquity base: $22 billionLevel three assets: $35 billionLevel 3 to equity ratio: 159%
  • Bear StearnsEquity base: $13 billionLevel three assets: $20 billionLevel 3 to equity ratio: 154%
  • CitigroupEquity base: $128 billionLevel three assets: $134.8 billion Level 3 to equity ratio: 105%
  • Merrill LynchEquity base: $42 billionLevel 3 assets: $35 billionLevel 3 to equity ratio: 38%"
I will certainly monitor the above stocks especially MS, GS, LEH and BSC and consider shorting them when the time is ripe. At the moment, these stocks are recovering from their recent losses. It seems that there are more room for these stocks to go down.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Market Update

The general market bounced back yesterday after 4 down days. Basically, the market bounced from its Support levels:
  • Dow Jones (50% of Fibonacci level)
  • S&P 500, SPY (61.8% of Fibonacci level)
  • Nasdaq Composite (SMA200)
  • AAPL (50% of Fibonacci level)
  • RIMM (38.2% of Fibonacci level)

Could it be a bull-trap? It remains to be seen. (Btw, I have no open positions at the moment)

I am now looking at the right set-up to short the financials (banks, mortgage lenders, etc) and housing stocks again. They are now experiencing a rally (it should be a short one though). Frankly, I prefer the market to experience some rally to recover some of their lost ground before testing the August Lows.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Tech Play - Positions Closed

Hi !

Just an update. I have closed all my positions in AAPL, RIMM and SPY when they are consolidating during lunch time yesterday. At that moment, AAPL and had been resting on its 38.2% Fibonacci level (taken from Aug low to year high), SPY resting on its 61.8% Fibonacci level and RIMM is resting on its 50 SMA. It seems then that the market is poised for a short rally. Since I have made my money, I thought, let's not take chances and take my profits that I deserve. The market went down further towards the later part of the day. Well, I am not perfect - but for these trades I am still very happy.

Sold Bear Call Spread AAPL Nov 185/190 @1.80
Bgt back @0.10
Profits = 53.1%

Sold Bear Call Spread RIMM Nov 125/130 @2.28
Bgt back @0.20
Profits = 74.5%


Sold Bear Call Spread SPY Nov 148/153 @1.81
Bgt back @0.83
Profits = 30.7%


The above play were over 3 market days.

Also played intraday trade for GOOG (straight Put). The first trade was disastrous. The second trade was much better and managed to recover the previous loss plus some profits. Then again, I closed too early and the market tanked further. I should not complain and still be thankful for what I have got.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Friday, November 09, 2007

Tech Play - AAPL, RIMM & SPY

In today's bearish market, I would not be a hero and play Long no matter how good the stock is - unless the stock benefit from an economic downturn. For shorts, which sector should we focus on then?

I would focus on sectors that had a good run recently and might be affected by the current bearish sentiments. One sector I'm focusing on now is Technology stocks. e.g. AAPL, RIMM, GOOG and many others had a very good run. While they are good stocks with strong fundamentals, they are not impervious to bad consumer sentiments. Since CSCO guidance yesterday, the tech stocks had been beaten badly yesterday. At market opening today, the bloodshed continues.

Since the market is volatile and the option premiums are somewhat expensive, I thought I should just play credit spreads and be less affected by the volitility (but less profit/risk). I opened 3 new positions yesterday, playing Bear Call credit spreads for Nov month (7 market days left) for the following stocks:

AAPL = Sell 185 Call , Buy 190 Call, for $1.80 when AAPL is around $182.72
RIMM = Sell 125 Call , Buy 130 Call, for $2.28 when RIMM is around $126.61
SPY = Sell 148 Call , Buy 153 Call, for $1.81 when SPY is around $147.60

For RIMM, I sold the 125 Call in-the-money. It is against what we have been taught (normally sell out-of-the-money). It is a higher risk play. But I reckon that since RIMM can move big, if I am wrong I would lose money anyway. I might as well collect more credits from my spreads and lower my risk that way.

So far, these new positions are positive. I may not wait for expiration Friday (Nov 16) to collect my profits.

Other sectors still bearish are Housing & Financials.
Note that SPY is not a Tech stock.

- PersianCat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Quick Comments on the US Market

My quick assessment of the US Stock Market:

I am generally very bearish over the US stock market based on the following reasons:
  • Subprime woes. It is already affecting housing stocks, mortgage lenders and banks in US. I believe the bottom is not near yet. More bad news can be expected. Once consumers spending is affected, it will greatly affect credit card companies, retail and tech stocks. The general market will go down in tandem somewhat. The earliest sign that tech stocks could be affected comes from today's CSCO guidance. Tech stocks that had pushed the market lately, tumbled today (as at 2:00pm ET)
  • Weak US Dollar. The ridiculous trade and budget deficit in the US coupled with lower Fed Interest Rate will push the US dollar lower. This somewhat pushed Gold & Oil to go higher. More countries such as China are also reducing their US$$$ holdings. As long as the FX market sees no bottom for the weak US dollar, the US stock market will be under pressure to go lower as inflows of funds to the US stock market might be lower.
  • China's Stock Market Bubble. Greenspan had been saying that China's stock market is generating a huge bubble. Now that he is out of government, I tend to trust his words more than before. China had enjoyed a bouyant economy. However, with the recall of many products from China, it had created a BIG FEAR among consumers in the West. Demand for its product might be affected. I suspect that a significant number of Chinese factories should face overproduction now. It is a matter of time before the media get to know about it. If the US market go down coupled with the weak US dollar, US consumer spending would be affected. The demand for Chinese goods would go down too. Thus creating more overproduction in Chinese factories (unless they can create demand from elsewhere fast enough). Soon the Chinese stock market will be affected to.

In a down market, all stocks, good or bad will go down too. Stock markets all over the world might go down the drain too. My concern is that this whole episode might create a global recession. The question is, "What will trigger (it is just a market excuse) the global market meltdown?" Is it something from the US, China or elsewhere?

The above arguments may sound very simplistic, but I suppose you get my point.

- Persiancat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)



I'm Back

Hi All,

I'm back updating my blog. It's been more than a year since I last wrote. I have been actively trading though. It is just that I couldn't find the time to write. Sometime last year, my mum-in-law was diagnosed with cancer. So have been busy shuttling her for treatment and check-ups and handling new chores/routines.

Anyway, she is now diagnosed to be free of her cancer cells. I have more time now and you could expect more of me in this blog.

The market is now entering an interesting phase. So watch out for my 2 cts worth.

- Persiancat04 (Millionaire-in-progress)