Unusual Options Activity Report 3.13.2013

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shutterstock 71668357 2Paper bought 500 NRGM July 25 Calls for $.80 (66.4 times usual volume) when stock was trading $23.50
Paper bought 2500 AMX April 21 Calls for $.25 (10.5 times usual volume) when stock was trading $20.09
Paper bought 8000 GT April 13 Calls for $.55 (4.8 times usual volume) when stock was trading $13.19
Paper sold 1000 ACAS May 15 Puts for $.52 when stock was trading $15.04
Paper sold 1000 ASIA July 11 Puts for $.275 (14.7 times usual volume) when stock was trading $11.92

A Crude Picture (USO, /CL, UNG) 3.13.2013

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If one was inclined to play this triangle, a trader could put on a butterfly whose short ‘guts’ is at the apex of the consolidation in May and hope for horizontal action. Should a trader put on the spread now at the aforementioned level, the spread would actually have a negative Vega position, for price is at the short strike, which is fine if that confirms your thesis. Otherwise, it may be prudent to wait until oil hits one of the two trend lines. A short Vega position may not be wise considering the historically low VIX level and how ‘on edge’ this market seems to be.  Should oil keep rallying, this action may support the oil and gas sector and put a damper on the retail sector and force capital to shift sectors, which may cause volatility too.

Either way opinions might fall; oil is absolutely a key driver to watch in a market that is mostly consumed by what AAPL and GOOG are doing.

salerno.mark.a@gmail.com

A Crude Picture

Props to CNBC's Jon Najarian: STX Profits

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Sometimes, I miss trades, because I am at a meeting, on the phone or away from my desk.  Every Morning when I wake up the first thing I do is turn on CNBC.  I watch to see the stocks that are moving in pre-market trading. On 3.4.2013 I saw a Trader buy 7500 STX April 35-38 Bull Call Spread for $.46.  I jumped on on board and bought the STX April 35 Calls for $.69 in real-time with real-money.  I sold the balance of these for $1.66 today. Then CNBC’s Jon Najarian talked these on the Halftime Report as well.  Great Call by him as he only flagged one trade that day. This was the biggest order over the last 10 trading days.  Let me show a breakdown of how much money this trader made.

Paper bought 7500 STX April 35-38 Call Spreads for $.47
(Paper is an order from a hedge fund, mutual fund, retail bank, or BIG trader)
Risk: $47 per a lot
Reward: $253
Breakeven: $35.47
Cash Outlay for this Trade: $352,500

Greeks of this Trade:
Delta: Long
Gamma: Long
Vega: Long
Theta: Short

On 3.12.2013, these Call Spread are worth $1.06, so lets breakdown this trades Profits.

$1.06- $.47 * 100 * 7500=  $442,500

If a trader risked $1,000 on this trade and bought 52 Options they would have netted $2,300

If a trader risked $5,000 on the trade and bought 260 Options, they would netted $11,500

This is just another example of trading with the BIG money and Hedge funds in the BEST Live Trading Room http://bit.ly/108XTgh as I breakdown over 2,000 trades in a day and also tweet them on our Premium Twitter feed http://bit.ly/WmtfI4

By the way, SEC leave those HNZ traders alone.

Biggest Bearish Activity 3.12.2013

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Bear CNBC Day TradingPaper bought 800 AN April 41 Puts for $.40 (9.5 times usual volume) when stock was trading $44.06
Paper bought 2500 JNK April 41 Puts for $.50 (2.6 times usual volume) when stock was trading $40.91
Paper bought 260 NYX June 33 Puts for $.15 when stock was trading $37.63
Paper bought 500 DK March 40 Puts for $.85 (3.8 times usual volume) when stock was trading $39.30
Paper sold 1900 TJX Jan 40 Puts for $1.625 when stock was trading $44.74

Biggest Bullish Activity 3.12.2013

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Bull market Stocks BondPaper bought 1000 DAR April 17.5 Calls for $.55 (18.9 times usual volume) when stock was trading $17.32
Paper bought 856 GPRE June 12.5 Calls for $1.10 (15.6 times usual volume) when stock was trading $12.01
Paper bought 8795 SQQQ April 35 Calls for $1.25 (7.1 times usual volume) when stock was trading $33.80
Paper bought 1000 PGH July 6 Calls for $.15 (4.8 times usual volume) when stock was trading $5.32
Paper bought 3000 LNC Jan 2014 40 Calls for $.78 (2.8 times usual volume) when stock was trading $33.06

Unusual Options Activity Report 3.12.2013

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shutterstock 71668357 2Paper bought 7479 JCP Aug 17 Calls for $2 when stock was trading $15.47
Paper bought 3000 LNC Jan 2014 40 Calls for $.78 (2.8 times usual volume) when stock was trading $33.06
Paper sold 2700 DNR April 18 Puts for $.35 (5.0 times usual volume) when stock was trading $18.37
Paper bought 464 RVM Aug 2.5 Calls for $.15 (25 times usual volume) when stock was trading $2.10
Paper sold 25,000 SNE Jan 2014 13 Puts for $.85 (7.4 times usual volume) when stock was trading $15.63

3.12.2013 Opening Bell

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FL Fundamentals (FL, NKE, SPY) 3.12.2013

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While the firm isn’t in the business of making shoes, it does correlate to footwear more than retail. During October 2012 to January 2013, FL (over a 21 day period) had a  solid and steady correlation coefficient of above 0.9 with footwear, while over the same period had a correlation coefficient ranging from 0.85 to -.35. The take away from this little exercise is that FL trades with the footwear sector and not necessarily in the retail sector (where Wall Street places them). FL’s depressed multiple, with respect to retail, could make invstors perceive FL is of value, but after the exercise above, perhaps it is prudent to compare FL to footwear.

The average forward multiple in footwear is roughly 14.8x and the median is about 13.9x. FL, at 12.6x  forward, trades below its industry average and median forward multiple. For good measure, the average forward multiple in retail is 19x. This is a slight discount.

 In the performance category of net margins, FL underperforms footwear. 58% of its footwear competition has higher net margins than it. Additionally; FL is below average net margins of 10.2%. FL’s management, however, outperforms the competition. The firm’s ROE is better than 68% of retail and better than half the footwear industry at 17%. Wall Street is expecting ROIC to grow 700 bps by 2014.


salerno.mark.a@gmail.com

Google Releases Talking Shoes (GOOG) 3.12.2013

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The talking shoe has a Bluetooth capability that allows it to talk to your smartphone, so it can measure your daily activity. The speaker on the tongue is loaded with 250 pre-recorded phrases that encourage you to get active, bash on your laziness and even is designed to give you some attitude.

Having a Bluetooth capability that allows you to track your daily activity through your smartphone isn’t that new of an idea. Nike released the Nike fuel band, Nike plus and basketball shoes that all have this capability. But, of course, the band, chip and shoes didn’t talk to you as you were running down that trail or sitting at home on the couch. Sure, it might be a little creepy at first but Google seems to be banking on that you will ease into the idea…

The shoe was designed with Adidas, and currently has no plans to release the show to the market but is viewing the feedback of what people have to think of a talking shoe before they take further action.

Author: Peter Nitso

Twitter: @PeterNitso

pnitso@yahoo.com

A Million Dollar Profit in GMCR in less than a Week

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Sometimes, I miss trades, because I am at a meeting, on the phone or away from my desk.  Every Morning when I wake up the first thing I do is turn on CNBC.  I watch to see the stocks that are moving in  pre-market trading.  I saw GMCR has been on fire on a possible short and squeeze.  So, then I went to my Unusual Options Activity scanner and noticed a trader bought 5517 GMCR April 55 Calls for $.96.  This was the biggest order over the last 10 trading days.  Let me show a breakdown of how much money this trader made.

Paper bought 5517 April 55 Calls for $.96
(Paper is an order from a hedge fund, mutual fund, retail bank, or BIG trader)
Risk: $96 per a lot
Reward: Unlimited
Breakeven: $55.96
Cash Outlay for this Trade: $529,632

Greeks of this Trade:
Delta: Long
Gamma: Long
Vega: Long
Theta: Short

On 3.11.2013, these Calls are worth $2.50, so lets breakdown this
trades Profits.

$2.50- $.96 * 100 * 5517=  $849,618

If a trader risked $1,000 on this trade and bought 11 Options they would have netted $2,500

If a trader risked $5,000 on the trade and bought 55 Options, they would netted $12,500

This is just another example of trading with the BIG money and Hedge funds in the BEST Live Trading Room http://bit.ly/108XTgh as I breakdown over 2,000 trades in a day and also tweet them on our Premium Twitter feed http://bit.ly/WmtfI4

By the way, SEC leave those HNZ traders alone.