Daily Market Newsletter
October 29, 2018Non-Directional Strategies
Semi-Directional Strategies
Directional Strategies
Bitcoin/Crypto
View Doc's New Book
November Expiration
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Market Commentary
I recall something that I saw on CNBC maybe ten years ago (when I did watch that channel) and we were dealing with yet another down day in the markets. The host was interviewing an experienced pit trader early in the morning and commenting on the early rally off the lows:
“It’s too early. I don’t like it.” I wondered what was so wrong about seeing a rally early in the morning but over the next year I learned more about that. When markets are in correction, bad news gets amplified and you truly want to let everyone panic at once and wash out of their positions. (The principle of maximum adversity) This is also called “Capitulation.” That is the surest way to stop a Bear, having a wash-out day to the downside. Rip off the band-aid.
And what I’ve learned was that the pit trader was right, and was proved right again today. We saw markets gap up early and things looked good for the gains to hold, but it gave those back – and more – from over-leveraged longs that bought the highs with both hands looking for the bounce. The S&P rallied 36 handles from Friday’s close, then dropped over ONE HUNDRED POINTS from there. The chart only closed down .66% because there was a 43 handle rally off of the lows in the last FIFTEEN minutes!
My thesis is that markets will thrash around in the near term to form an intermediate bottom, at which point they should bounce into a lower high. That’s when we find out what’s next…more pain or higher prices into year end. Either scenario could play out although it’s easy to imagine the bear kicking in now. Just about every article in the financial media sites that I frequent were bearish today.
Here is the current scorecard:
- S&P is down ~337 points or 11.46%
- Dow is down 2830 points or 10.5%
- /NQ is down 1148 points or 14.85%
- RUT is down 283 points or 16.3%
These next two trading weeks will be absolutely tumultuous in the markets; “certainty” will be elusive. There is still a 70% chance of a rate hike in December.
After this week clears out, 3Q earnings are on the decline in terms of their impact. Here are companies of note reporting earnings for the rest of this week:
- Tuesday: FB, GE, KO
- Wednesday: YUM
- Thursday: AAPL
- Friday: ABBV, BABA, XOM
Our approach will be to sell credit spreads into what we perceive as relative extremes, and look to take directional trades into swings. We need to be looking to take the trades that “feel” bad, as well as sell profitable positions too early. It’s going to be a period filled with opportunity for those willing to go against the grain.
The scan for the “Cheap Stocks with Weeklys” is available here.
The RSI(2) FE scan is available here.
The current MAIN “high liquidity” watchlist that I’m scanning against in thinkorswim is available here.
Please sign up for our free daily crypto report here.
Please click here for an embedded version of today’s video.
Offensive Actions
Offensive Actions for the next trading day:
- I’ll look for a bounce back up to sell the SPX 7DEC 2945/2955 short call spreads to complete my HP Iron Condor; see “Iron Condors” section below.
- I will roll my RUT put spreads to the 21DEC 1240/1250 put spreads for a minimum $.80 credit; see “HP Condors” section below.
- I will look to enter the SSO (stock) long on a wash-out low based on a single-digit number of advancing stocks in the S&P.
Defensive Actions
Defensive actions for the next trading day:
- Any vertical, butterfly, or diagonal debit spreads that we set up are risk-managed from day one, and no defense is really required.
- Closing orders have been entered for all new spreads.
- I will look to close out the Put Butterfly if the price of the S&P hits the lower EM for the week.
Strategy Summary Graphs
Each graph below represents a summary of the current performance of a strategy category. For an explanation of what the graphs mean, watch this video.
Non-Directional Strategies
Semi-Directional Strategies
Directional Strategies
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Technical Analysis Section
Market Internals: Volume was well above-average today and breadth ended the day mixed with +33 advancers minus decliners, however that was after opening the day at +481.
SPX Market Timer : The Intermediate line fell further into the Lower Reversal Zone, still showing a bearish bias. No leading signals at this time but this chart is extremely close to showing a Full Bullish Cluster with all timeframes oversold.
DOW Theory: The SPX is in a long term uptrend, an intermediate downtrend, and a short-term downtrend. The RUT is in a long-term uptrend, an intermediate downtrend, and a short-term downtrend. The Dow is in an intermediate downtrend and short-term downtrend.
VIX: The VIX rose to 24.70 after peaking at 50.3 eight months ago, barely inside the bollinger bands. The RVX rose to 29.36 and is back inside the bollinger bands.
Fibonacci Retracements: The SPX has closed well below the 61.8% retracement of the entire swing off the February bottom; this increases the odds that we will see the price “fill in the triangle.”
Support/Resistance: For the SPX, support is at 2500 … with overhead resistance at 2941. The RUT has support at RUT 1436 with overhead resistance at 1742. All three major index charts that we follow are now showing a Golden Cross with the 50 day moving average crossing above the 200 day average. All charts are a long ways off from showing a Death Cross.
Fractal Energies: The major timeframe (Monthly) is fully recharged again, with a reading of 55. The Weekly chart has an energy reading of 39, however it is picking up the trend on the downtrend now. The Daily chart is showing a level of 45 which is above exhaustion and recharging quickly. The RUT has both the weekly and daily charts showing exhaustion now; we normally see trends “pause” or reverse in this state.
Other Technicals: The SPX Stochastics indicator flattened at 27, above oversold. The RUT Stochastics indicator rose to 21, above oversold. SPX MACD histogram fell below the signal line, showing a loss of upside momentum. The SPX is inside the Bollinger Bands with Bollinger Band support at 2614 and resistance at the upper band at 2961 and price is at the lower band. The RUT is inside the Bollinger Bands with its boundaries at 1449 to 1687 and price is at the lower band and has released from a squeeze.
Position Management – NonDirectional Trades
I have the following positions in play:
- SPX 7DEC 2490/2500 Short Put Spreads (10/22) entered for $.80 credit. I will first look to add short call spreads on the next bounce back up. I would close this position if the short put delta (1500) hits the .45 level. It is currently showing a .21 delta.
Now that I’ve filled the SPX put spreads, I will look for the corresponding short call spreads on the bounce back up. I will target the SPX 7DEC 2945/2955 call spreads for $.80.
At this point I would consider rolling the RUT position to the 21DEC 1240/1250 short put spread for a minimum $.80 credit.
I have no positions at this time.
We’ll park this strategy until the next high-probability condition shows. We’ll want to see daily exhaustion on the SPX or RUT after a strong move, at the very least. This strategy works best with a quiet/trending market, and not with a sideways/volatile one.
I have no remaining positions. Calendar spreads are good for markets in quiet/trending character, so there is a good shot that we can start to play these again.
The calendar spread tracking sheet is available for your download here. Yes, if you follow the math in the sheet, all of the numbers account for commissions in and out of the trade. Please note: If you trade these positions please keep the size small, to the point where you “do not care” about the success or failure of this position.
I am targeting stocks using short puts/covered calls that offer a much lower absolute risk point, where in event of a crash we can almost define our total risk by the price of the underlying. While this is not how I intend to manage risk in these positions, I view this as fundamentally more solid than trying to actively manage risk on assets that are going for $$$hundreds which have also gone parabolic. I have the following positions in play:
- SLV Stock – I have 1000 shares of the SLV that was assigned at the $15 level. I sold the 31DEC $15 SLV calls (10/3) for $.16.
- SSO – I sold SSO 16NOV $109 puts (10/8) for $1.20 credit. I’m still fine with this position and will accept assignment should the price drop from these levels. I will consider buying back these positions should the price bounce higher.
- GLW – I sold GLW 21DEC $26 puts (10/22) for $.26 credit.
- CSCO – I sold CSCO 21DEC $40 puts (10/22) for $.40 credit.
- INTC – I sold INTC 21DEC $37 puts (10/22) for $.37 credit.
No other trades at this time. The recent trades were relatively small positions that would create a discount entry should I be assigned.
Position Management – Directional Trades
Thoughts on current swing strategies:
- 8/21 EMA Crossover – No current positions. The 8/21 EMA pair has now crossed to the downside.
- RSI(2) CounterTrend – Looking for the next setup. Lots of these showing now, best to play these during primary uptrend.
- Daily S&P Advancers – if I see the number of daily S&P500 advancers drop into single digits near the close of any trading day, I will go long shares of the SSO.
- Swing – I have no trades in play at this time.
The crypto market is holding tough while equities get slammed. So far I am not seeing a lot of correlation between these markets.
Investors should currently be looking to find technical entries to warehouse BTC/ETH/LTC assets for eventual trades on Alt-coins. You should also be looking to devices like “trezor” or other cold-storage devices to keep your assets off of the network, or other secure wallet such as Navcoin. Relying on the security of your broker is no longer good enough; no one can log into your ETrade account and “steal” your stock assets, but the whole nature of Cryptocurrencies and their portability means that someone can grab your assets and transfer them elsewhere. I will continue to discuss the tradingview platform in daily videos as I think that it is currently the best way to chart the “big three.”
Viewing the SPY from the Friday closing price at 265.33, there is a +/-9.034 EM into this coming Friday. This is about 50% larger than last week’s 6.589 EM and reflects the fear/indecision in the markets that is not going away.
The EM targets for this Friday’s close are 274.36 to the upside, and 256.3 to the downside.
The lower EM for last week did not hold. We will try to scope out a fade of either EM level this week, discussed in Saturday’s video.
Per this weekend’s report, I thought that there was a higher probability of seeing the lower EM tested this week, so we set up an OTM butterfly:
- SPY 2NOV 254/256/258 Debit Put Butterfly (10/29) entered for $.06. I will look for the price to come down to the lower EM and close the position at that point.
This is a new section for this newsletter; I would like to start to carefully build some bearish positions that would be the virtual opposite of a covered call, yet I will use deep ITM long puts as the short stock substitute, and write short covered puts against those long puts.
I would like to add one additional consideration to the criteria, in that I’d like to see the price print a “lower high” first on the daily chart. Otherwise what is “high” can go “higher” as we’ve seen repeatedly over the years.
I will also publish the criteria for managing the short and long positions with this strategy. This is definitely counter-trend for now but might prove to be valuable down the road.
We previously were seeing LOW and UNP show up on this scan, and both would be winners now. . Quite honestly nothing has really faded after showing on this scan.
Previously I was seeing MRK, PFE, and LLY show up on this scan; I added the MRK 16NOV $75 puts for about $7.00/contract as a paper trade. I’ll just track this one on paper for now while we develop management rules. If the price drops I will sell short-term puts against it (on paper). Even these NOV puts are still underwater after recent distribution.
The scan that I discussed in the 8/4/2018 video is available to download for thinkorswim here: http://tos.mx/OvdVnz
I will also be adding a second Larry Connors scan to this section as well; here is the Connors Crash scan: http://tos.mx/BhHuKL
I have the following positions at this time:
- NVDA 02NOV 285/287.5 debit call spread (10/1) entered for $1.22 debit, looking for 50% return on this trade. I missed my opportunity to make a quick 30% and get out.
No other entries at this point. I would prefer to see the market stabilize first before looking long again. We will see big volatility over the next two+ months.
The “Hindenburg Strategy” is meant to capture “value” from successive corrections that lead up to the final “death spiral” with a Bear Market. The basic principle is to buy 3-month out long puts on the SPY, and to finance those puts by the sale of credit spreads. Frankly, selling the “financing” trades has been a huge challenge in this low-vol environment. I will only sell put spreads on decent pullbacks that allow me to secure put spreads 10% OTM. We have no positions at the current time.
I have no positions at this time. I cleared out the current puts on the drop to the 200ma. I will “reload” again on the next bounce up.