Pregame MOS Earnings From Every Angle 10.1.2012

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They will announce October 2nd 2012 before the market open, so option trades must be executed by the close on Monday. It is prudent to look at a little bit of MOS earnings history before diving into the options activity, charts, and fundamentals.

Below is a daily candle chart of price’s reaction to the past 6 earnings announcements from MOS. After five of the last six releases, the stock gapped and continued the trend three to six days post the event. One time the stock gapped up and grinded sideways, but otherwise it has trended…a powerful tell for traders.

Now to what is implied for the coming event, because the October options still have about 19 days to trade, it is best to look at the weekly options as an organic way to derive what is implied for the event on the 2nd. Using an implied volatility & time based model, we calculate the one-sigma move (68% probability within) to be roughly + or -$3.31 and the two-sigma move (95% probability within) about $6.62 either way, by October 5th. On Thursday, September 25th 2012, the stock had a solid bear candle…testing the lower end of its recent range from post Q4 earnings. Implied volatility (a measure of risk, supply and demand, relative price, and an input into theoretical models) in the October monthly options rallied up 400 bps from about 30% to 34% IV (implied volatility). Given the pump up in IV, there in now more premium to work with.

The following chart includes the one and two sigma rolling probability cone and a confluence of simple moving averages (50,100, 150 and 200). From a technical prospective, the range from mid July of 2012 to now has been solid horizontal support at $56.60, for it has been tested many times. It is also interesting to note the assemblage of simple moving averages. They will sit just below the lower end of the implied one-sigma range on expiration Friday…strong potential support (see chart).

The ATM (at the money $57.5) weekly straddle (lifting the offer) is at about $2.75 or about $4.8% of MOS. Using a theoretical model, and adjusting time and implied volatility, in order to break even immediately after the event, Wednesday, MOS must move up $2.64 (4.4%) or down $2.82 (-4.7%) to offset the IV crush and time decay. I came to post event weekly IV of 33.5% from looking back at prior releases. The average drop in IV was 31%. It is important to be conservative, for estimating lower IV puts your break evens farther away on a long straddle…planning for the worst, and hoping for the best!

Fundamentally, MOS was recently reiterated as a buy from Citi; looking for $71/share from $66. Citi called for an extended agricultural cycle, after the dramatic droughts across the Midwest destroyed crops. Elsewhere, of the major houses, analysts have 17 buys, 7 holds and zero sells. The median multiple for next year is 10.47 and the average price target is $66.95.

It is important to build a ‘mosaic’ when looking at potential trades. Taking bits and pieces from many indicators, markets, and theories creates a well informed trader.

E-mail the author with any comments, questions, or any inquiry

mark@keeneonthemarket.com

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Morning Rage 10.1.2012

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Cal-Maine Foods Inc. (CALM) is scheduled to report quarterly financial results this morning before the market opens. Cal-Main is the largest producer of shell eggs in the US. A market cap of 1.08B, the stock has seen a steady yearly growth of 50%, $0.04 below the 52 week high of $44.98. The stock was up $0.36 on Friday.

The ISM Manufacturing Index will be released today at 10 am EST. The survey measures manufacturing employment, production, new orders, supplier deliveries, and inventories. Any result above 43 shows growth in the US economy, but a shrinking manufacturing sector. Any number above 50 shows a growing manufacturing sector. Analysts are projecting a tenth of a point in growth to 49.7.

Trade of the Day 9.28.2012

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shutterstock 80453707Trade:  Buying the PXP Nov 39 Calls for $1.40

Risk: $140 per 1 lot

Reward: Unlimited

Notes:  Good risk vs reward, but chart does not line up for a Bullish position.

Associate Option Battle 9.28.2012

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Notes: Sold off 2 of the last 3 earnings reports and the stock is down from recent highs and I think it will test lower after the report on Oct 2nd.  I’ve also sold back half of my RIMM call spreads I bought two days ago for $0.30 (I payed $0.15).

Associate Alex’s Trade

First off, I hope nobody played the Apple pick yesterday because it got crushed.

My trade: Sell 13 lot ORCL Weekly (Oct12) 31.50 – 30.50 Put Spread for $0.28.

My reward: $28 per one lot

My risk: $72 per one lot

Why I like this trade: ORCL had a slight dip after it met analysts’ expectations but I think it should bounce back and I only need it to move $0.05 for the put spread to be out of the money.

Alex Kalish has a masters in economics from Suffolk U.  alexk@keeneonthemarket.com

James Ramelli has a B.S. in Finance from UIUC.  james@keeneonthemarket.com


Unusual Option Activity 9.28.2012

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Paper bought 3306 PXP Nov 39 Calls for $1.40 (2.0 times usual volume) when stock was trading $36.68

Paper sold 961 AFCE Oct 25 Puts for $.80 (111 times usual volume) when stock was trading $24.68

Covered Call of the Day SLB 9.28.2012

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Schlumberger’s annual earnings increased $0.80 from 2010 and is expected to increase another $0.65 from 2011. Quarterly revenues have been stable and should is expected to be higher in the next two quarters, after beating estimates three out of the last five quarters.

My trade is to buy the stock at $72.47 and sell the SLB Nov 67.5 Calls for $5.80. I expect an 8% return from selling the call. My risk is the stock free-falling to zero and my reward is the price of the call, $5.80. My break-even point is $66.67, which is also my risk.

A RIMM Turnaround? 9.28.2012

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Before diving into the fundamentals, a technical prospective is needed. Last quarter’s earnings gap sits from $8.87 to $7.98. 61.8% of this gap has filled during the August 6th -10th pop on rumors and speculation of IBM and RIMM getting together. This is naturally following the RIMM/Samsung and RIMM/MSFT past rumors; and considering RIMM’s 17% short interest, why not float a rumor out there for a good pop. Besides the unfinished gap fill, the rumor-powered prior high sits also near $8.47; so unhappy rumor buyers who are still stuck with stock may offer out supply at these lofty levels (lofty naturally being a relative term, especially for RIMM, as it has been sitting near lows).

Do the fundamentals back up today’s gap? In short, it depends on what RIMM story you subscribe to. RIMM has put forth many products that were intended to be ‘game changers’ but just ended up falling on their face. Wall Street seems to have a bad memory for prior flops include the extraordinarily hyped up Playbook Tablet. According to former CEO Lazaridis, “the BlackBerry PlayBook solidly hits the mark with industry leading power, true multitasking, uncompromised web browsing and high performance multimedia”…too bad it did not hit the mark in the sales category; with unit sales dropping to 130K this quarter. To put this figure into prospective AAPL moved 17 million iPad units in their most recent third quarter. Now CEO Thorsten Heins said confidently to investors that he believes BlackBerry 10 will take market share. If the new BB10 is anything like history is will not be good for investors. It can be argued that even if RIMM comes out with a superior phone it will not gain traction for the AAPL & GOOG movement is too powerful to stop, and they do not have the apps or ecosystem to back it up.

The chart below shows the annual percentage change in revenue, SG&A (Selling, General and Administrative Expenses), research and development, operating income, and finally cash and short term investments. This chart exemplifies RIMM’s problems. RIMM is burning through cash and not using it wisely, for the devices seem to always lack traction.

While all this is well and good, the trade could be something completely different. RIMM is a perpetual M&A rumor, but it is also difficult to stay short a name trading at $8.00 or a $4.2 billion market capitalization with nearly $1.7 billion in cash and short term investments, unless you have a lot of conviction. So maybe the best trade is no trade at all.

E-mail the author with any comments, questions, or any inquiry

mark@keeneonthemarket.com

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