Archive for the Options Category

[Posted @ 18:13:47]

In the midst of all this optimism, I feel like a complete contrarian. I bought some May puts in SPY a week ago and my portfolio took a beating. Am I wrong in believing the markets are going to fall catastrophically due to the markets short-sighted optimism? I don’t know. Certainly, at this point in time, I am doubting my beliefs about the market’s near future.

However, when I take a look at SPY’s May Options Table, I see this (taken off of CBOE on April 19th, 2008):

Since I don’t know what the table looked like last week, I can only guess a lot of other people are either (1) in the same position as I, owning quite a bit of puts or (2), accumulating puts in anticipation for future decline in the SPY before May expirations. Unfortunately, I can’t check the implied volatilities for these chains since my data provider is down for maintenance over the weekends.

For now though, I think I’ll sit tight with my puts and see what unravels next week. Am I hoping for bad news? Yes. I shouldn’t hope, but what is there for a bear to do during a large upswing partially justified in good earnings from GOOG and IBM?

[Posted @ 11:01:07]

Not going to spend much time on this post today as I have two finals to take care of tomorrow. The gist of it would be that a big player(s?) came into the market today and probably used FOK (Fill or Kill) orders. The trader(s?) wrote around 15,000 IWM May08 70 calls and bought 18,000 IWM May08 70 puts. The interesting thing to note is that when the player(s?) wrote the calls, they were beneath the current bid prices. I suppose, in order to fill an order of that magnitude, the trader had to go below bidding price to get the desired size. Here’s the trade summary along with the corresponding charts and time and sales.

Calls Description Puts
Time Trade Price Size Current Bid Time Trade Price Size Current Ask
10:13:02 2.15 5,000 2.44 May 16 ‘08 10:15:56 1.84 10,000 1.81
10:15:56 2.44 8,000 2.49 May 16 ‘08 10:56:24 1.85 4,000 1.85
10:16:07 2.44 2,000 2.49 May 16 ‘08 11:00:28 1.86 3,000 1.86
11:00:28 1.87 1,000 1.86

[Posted on 2008-04-16 @ 11:16:54]

I checked EBAY’s option activity for today. I interpret it as bearish. Calls are being sold at bid, and puts are being bought at ask. Position placed expecting EBAY to miss. Purely speculative. Close after earnings are released regardless of gain or loss on Thursday.

Just a warning, I took these images BEFORE the close so the charts will not be representative of today’s ending data.

(No posts over weekend, going to focus on school) — WOOO! Eye opening day for me today. I suppose it’s because I’m still young, inexperienced, and vulnerable to be fascinated by new experiences! I was finally able to get some quality time with Bloomberg this afternoon and found some quite interesting information on MER. It can be seen that LOTS of front-month options (i.e., the closest month to expiration for an option contract) are being traded! Not only are they being traded, but Open Interest is high too! I found out why there has been the options spike. But first, let’s take a look at Bloomberg’s Equity ANR Function (the Analyst Recommendations page)

MER_20080328 - MER ANR

As we can see, under Analyst, we find Meredith A Whitney. This person put an underperform on MER on March 27, 2008. The day before, Charles W Peabody put a sell recommendation on MER. The focus based on my findings, however, are the actions of Meredith Whitney. This is a snippen of her note regarding MER on March 27th.

Merrill may post a loss of $3 per share and write down $6
billion of assets, Whitney wrote in a report dated yesterday.
Zurich-based UBS will lose $2.75 per share after writing down
about $11 billion, she said. Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. also
abandoned its prediction of a profit for Merrill today.
“We expect the brokers and banks to take another round of
writedowns on their mortgage-related positions,” said Whitney,
who correctly predicted two months in advance that Citigroup Inc.
would reduce its dividend to preserve capital.

“We believe Merrill Lynch will go through the disruptive
step of true structural reorganization or right sizing that will
dominate the bulk of 2008,” she wrote. Whitney has an
“underperform” recommendation on shares of Merrill Lynch, the
third-biggest U.S. securities firm.

The full article can be found here.

Anywho, it’s looking bad for MER with analysts views being negative.

Let’s take a look at Bloomberg’s OMST (Most Active Options function) to see which options are being heavily traded today. Notice the Open Interest Put/Call ratio. It’s currently at 1.65. Interesting.

mer_20080328-mer-omst.gif

Whoa. Do you see that? APR08 30 Puts and APR08 40 Puts are trading quite heavily. Let’s look into this to find whether traders are Selling the options or Buying the options. First, let’s look at the option that would most likely expire in-the-money (i.e., APR08 40 Puts). First and foremost, let’s look at the historical chart for this option to identify when, exactly, did interest begin with this particular option:

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-40p-gpc.gif

It seems as if the APR08 40 Puts started getting hot after the analyst downgrades. I suspect the previous dramatic increases in contracts traded was due large to the extremely large fluctuations of the underlying. Bloomberg’s VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) function is seen below. The VWAP, as the name implies, determines the average price of all the options traded in the period (indicated by the green line on the chart). This graph helps determine whether trades took place on the Ask (Buy) side or the Bid (Sell) side. If there are more Asks than Bids, then that almost always means there were more purchases of the option than sales of the options. In other words, for this particular option (MER APR08 40 Put), it is screaming a signal that MER will be heading down below $40 before April expiration comes around. What is interesting for me, is that OpInt (Open Interest) is currently above 70,000. That’s huge (for me at least.. iuno, I suppose I’m still in experienced). Anyways, here’s the VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price):

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-40p-tsm-vwap.gif

Here are the trades that are included into the VWAP calculation:

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-40p-tsm-table.gif

It is pretty obvious that nearly EVERY trade is betting MER will, at the very least, dip below $40. Now let’s look at the most actively traded option today, the MER APR08 30 Put option.

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-30p-gpc.gif

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-30p-tsm-vwap.gif

mer_20080328-mer-apr08-30p-tsm-table.gif

Unforetunately, this set of data is not as clear as the APR08 40 Puts. Currently, open interest for this option is above 60,000. However, what makes this uneasy is the balanced buying and selling of this option. For me, this indicates resistance at $30. There are people on both sides willing to put down real money to bet MER will either stay above 30 or below 30.

It will be very interesting to see how MER will do on its earnings this first quarter. I honestly do not know if MER will release after April expirations. Smart Money says, “MER is going below 40 but it might go below 30.” Or at least that’s what it’s saying to me on this wonderful Friday afternoon (wonderful in terms of FXI’s locked gains).

MER APR08 40 Put options have experienced a huge spike today. I suspect insider information.. or at least very high speculation.

MER April Options Table (Notice the unusually high volume in the highlighted row)
MER_20080327 - APR Options Table

Here’s the Apri08 40 Put Graph for March 27, 2008
MER_20080327 - APR08 40P Graph

I checked the Time and Sales; the trades between 10am and 11am traded mostly at asking prices. In other words, heavy April 40 Put buying. I’ll have to check the historical charts when I get a chance to go on Bloomberg. Unfortunately, I don’t see any support/resistance levels using technical analysis to enforce this speculative buying.

MER’s going to dip below $40 again before April expiration comes around.

FXI Update: Today, FXI broke $135.00 but could not hold above that level and closed at 132.50. I did not close my position on FXI when it was trading above 135.00 because, at the time, options activity indicated heavy April 125 Put selling… plus, I suppose I am hesitant to sell since I have not seen the big buyer from a couple days back (refer to previous FXI post) close out his/her position… plus, I think I’m getting greedy. Greed is not a good thing. After checking options activity after the close, there is April 139 Put buying. This is making me uneasy.

FXI_20080327 - APR08 Options Table FXI_20080327 - APR08 Options Table

Today I want to make my case to buy iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index (Ticker: FXI). Currently, FXI is trading above its support fibonacci level of 76.4%. This level is found if I connect the low and high in around a year’s timespan.

20080324 FXI Weekly Fib

Let’s zoom in so we see the daily chart for the past three months…

20080324 FXI Daily Fib

As we can see, FXI bounced off it’s 76.4% support level yesterday and closed today at 128.35. Here’s when it gets REALLY interesting. Today, at around 11:40AM EST, a BIG buyer of options came in. Here’s my FXI options monitor. Notice the APR 18′ 08 135C and 140C in particular. Notice the HIGH volume compared to every other April option available.

20080324 FXI APR08 CallsnPuts

More specifically, APR08 135C and 140C have over 3,000 units traded today… Hmm.. Let’s look into that further. Let’s look at the time and sales for these two options.

APR08 135C (2008.03.24 Time and Sale)
20080324 FXI APR08 135C TnS

APR08 140C (2008.03.24 Time and Sale)
20080324 FXI APR08 140C TnS

These two trades were done almost simultaneously (e.g., look at the 11:39:18AM trades made on both contracts) Putting this together, we can inductively infer that the same person performed the two trades! We get the following:

  • 3,000 contracts of APR08 135 Calls bought for $5.60/contract
  • 3,000 contracts of APR 08 140 Calls sold for $3.60/contract

In other words, this trade would have cost our friend..

+ 3,000 x 5.60 x 100 (Bought $1,680,000 of options)
- 3,000 x 3.60 x 100 (Sold $1,080,000 of options)
Total = $600,000 net (The person paid $600,000 worth of options)

So.. What does this mean? It means someone is betting A LOT of money in options expecting FXI to trade below 140 but above 135 before April comes around.

It gives me peace of mind when I know someone else in the world (with a whole lot more money to risk) is in a trade with me.

BOTTOM LINE: BUY FXI! Money speaks. And right now, it’s saying FXI is going to go above 130 before April. Sell when the price is near resistance at 137.68 (the 61.8% line).