Max Out the Credit Card on Visa Volatility? 10.31.12

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Visa has turned itself into a solid stock since its IPO in late 2008. V opened at $59.50 and is trading around $138 now… returning a cool 133%. The ride has been anything but steady however, the crash of 2008 and numerous regulation attempts have shaken some out of the trade, but the question remains…is IV too cheap for the week of a major catalyst like earnings?

Should one subscribe to history, the straddle has not been a profitable trade during earnings. As seen in the excel sheet below, buying the ‘at the money’ (ATM) straddle has been a loser five of the last six times…six observations because weekly options were not available prior to 5/5/11 before earnings. It is important to point out that the IV during these trades were all in line with the average, but now the IV is outside minus two standard deviations of the mean or 97.51% of the observations are above it. It may not be a prudent strategy to fade such low premium, as one may be selling into a hole. Fading the straddle is a popular trade among ‘gun slingers’, but the key variable in options, being implied volatility, may persuade one to think again…and maybe flip it as a long trade.

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mark@keeneonthemarket.com

AAPL Historic Pullbacks 10.26.2012

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It is important to remember, of retail AAPL investors, the average person has 17% of their portfolio in AAPL. See below for the weighted average and average pullback analysis.

The pullback of late is right in line with history. This is despite the bearish sentiment in the overall market. As displayed below, the analysts actually lowered their price targets; perhaps again it will be prudent to fade them.

The analyst community shifted their chips around, below are the results.

GS lowers price target to $760 from $810.

MS lowers PT to $714 from $720. 

Topeka Maintains $1,111 PT.

Piper Jaffray lowers PT to $900 from $910.

BCS lowers PT to $800 from $810

DB lowers PT to $800 from $850

Nomura lowers PT to $660 from $710

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mark@keeneonthemarket.com

MarkAPL MarkAAPL10.26

Pregame AAPL Earnings From Every Angle 10.25.12

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The first graphic is a daily bar chart of price’s reaction to the past nine earnings announcements from AAPL. Action after the event is mixed; in most of the sample set, eight of the nine observations, AAPL gapped, but then filled or reversed into said gap. In the other observations, AAPL gapped, but then trended or pinned that Friday. This is indicative of efficient markets and random walk…for each observation is unique and independent of past price action. The gap is the price’s way of adjusting to new news. While this gap may seem inefficient, the derivatives market, in most cases, was expecting said move.

Screen shot 2012-10-25 at 7.11.46 AM

Now to what is implied for the coming event, because the AAPL weekly options only have two days until expiration, they will be an organic way to derive what is implied for the event today after the close.  Using the KOTM implied volatility & time based model, we calculated the one-sigma move (68% probability within) to be roughly $38 up/down or about 68% chance we settle between $654 and $577 by the close on Friday. The two sigma move (95% probability within) is $77 either way or $692  & $539. The implied volatility curve (IV being a measure of risk, supply and demand, relative price, and an input into theoretical models) is displayed below, for it is important to know, especially if one is trading two different months in a spread.

The following chart includes the one and two sigma rolling probability cone, volume profile, and major moving averages (50, 100, 150, & 200).  While the chart may seem noisy, it sure does tell us a lot if you listen! AAPL made its ATH of $700 and has been sifting lower since. Anchoring the breakout on 1/15/2012, AAPL is just about at the 38.2 Fibonacci retracement level. The 150-day moving average at about $614 has proved to be solid support over the last three days. Other than little support levels like prior lows, the next serious support level is the 200-day moving average at $586. Considering the massive OI in the weekly options there is a change it could pin, even though we are not using the monthly cycle options. On expiration Friday, the 50-day will sit at the higher end of the two-sigma rolling probability level, and the 200-day at the lower end.  The 200-day is -4.8% away and the 50-day is 7.5% away.

Screen shot 2012-10-25 at 7.23.33 AM

The ATM (at the money) front month $615 straddle (lifting the offer) is at about $32.10 (5.1% of stock). Because deltas move to one faster near expiration, it is easy to calculate break evens on the straddle; $582.9.75 & $647.06… IV crush, large gamma, and time decay.

IV is actually expensive however, historically speaking, given the average is 68% and Wednesday closed at 86%. The average % move and net change are about 5.5% & $26 respectively…see excel sheet for all data. Considering AAPL’s price, the ATM straddle will cost about $3,200. This is where the AVSPY will come in handy, while this is not a pure AAPL play, it does lower the relative cost.  The $220 ATM AVSPY straddle is about $15, about 6.8% of that product, and only $1500 per one lot.

Screen shot 2012-10-25 at 7.55.51 AM

Alpha options explained here LINK

http://www.keeneonthemarket.com/blog/1562-goog-aapl-spy-alpha-option-review-avspy-a-goosy-10172012

Feel free to e-mail any comments, feedback, suggestions, or general inquiries to…

Author

mark@keeneonthemarket.com

Data courtesy of Thinkorswim