More AAPL Rumors: The iWatch 1.3.2013

In the same report TGBus also stated that AAPL is working with Intel on a Bluetooth watch that would be compatible with the iPhone. Supposedly the iWatch device will be able to link to the user’s iPhone via Bluetooth connection, which allows for AAPLs voice assistant software Siri, to send voice commands from the iWatch to the iPhone. Voice assistance from Siri could make checking emails, sending a text message or setting a reminder, even simpler while wearing the iWatch device.  AAPL has not made an announcement confirming the recent reports, however, some analyst claim that it’s only a matter of time before wearable computer devices take over the market. Piper Jaffray analyst, Gene Munster, said “We believe that longer term, over the next 10 years, wearable computers could eventually replace the iPhone and smartphones in general.” The rising popularity of the AAPL approved iWatchz may encourage AAPL to enter the market with its own smart watch device. The iWatchz are designed to turn the iPod Nano into a wrist watch. If AAPL successfully entered the smart watch market other tech companies would be inclined to compete for market share by developing their own versions of the smart watch devices. AAPL has done an exceptional job creating demand for their products, which normally out sell their competition. AAPL already has its own cloud platform, voice recognition software, and of course the iOS operating system that can be incorporated into a new device. By already possessing excellent technology AAPL is in a good position to develop an iWatch device and take control of a large portion of the smart watch market.

 

Author: Tyler Sciortino

Current Student at Roosevelt University, Majoring in Finance.

Contact for questions or inquiries at tsciortino@mail.roosevelt.edu

How Low Can The VIX Go? 1.3.2013

VIX 2012 Year

Bloomberg’s historical data compilation shows the near 33% decline in VIX futures over the past 2 days to be the sharpest on record, defying pundit wisdom that a cliff resolution was ‘baked in’ to the market.

Since 2004 the January 24, 2007 VIX close of 9.89 is the lowest on record – and was preceded by 4 months of trading in a 2-point range between 12 and 14; the same period in 2012 shows a nearly a 9-point range.

VIX 2007 VIX 2012

While the market’s response was clearly favorable to the House’s 11th hour passage of a bill staving off widespread tax increases – predicted by many economists to throw the US back into a recession – the legislation does nothing to mitigate a much greater threat posed by the pending debt ceiling. The Treasury has taken self-proclaimed ‘extraordinary measures’ to create $200B in headroom giving Congress a late February/early March deadline to strike a deal. A protracted negotiation or absence of a deal threatens the nations AA+ rating and would engulf the markets in further turmoil.

The next deadline is that of the ‘sequester,’ a series of automatic federal spending cuts ranging 8%-10% born out of the 2011 debt ceiling deal and designed as an incentive to force legislators to be effective in reducing deficits. While defense is widely projected be the hardest hit in the absence of a deal, programs across the board would suffer.

The third issue facing lawmakers is that of the ‘Continuing Budget Resolution’ and its March 27 deadline. Since Congress has been unable to agree on a real budget for years, they have instead become reliant on short-term resolutions that essentially amount to a ‘band aid’ approach. Without an agreement, expect to see a shutdown of government functions and programs.

Unless we are witness to a dramatic departure from the dysfunction of the 112th Congress – the most unproductive session in 70 years – with the swearing in of the 113th, I wouldn’t bet on VIX futures going south of 13 in Q1 ’13. Certainly not below 12, not with 3 pending ‘cliffs’ that will undoubtedly be accompanied by countdown clocks on the sidebars of various broadcast media outlets.

Further down the road in 2013, the only circumstance where I can envision a further decline in VIX levels would be if we were to see a favorable resolution to the European situation. Angela Merkel gave ominous closure to 2012, saying:

“I know that many are also heading into the New Year with trepidation. And indeed, the economic environment next year will not be easier, but more difficult. That should not discourage us, but – on the contrary – serve as an incentive.”

Based on the information outlined here, I believe we may have come very close to seeing the low VIX level for the year in 2013’s first day of trading.


John Voorheis
KOTM Contributor
john@keeneonthemarket.com

UNC-Chapel Hill, Class of 2008
BA Economics; Political Science

Natural Gas Futures Technical Update (/NG, UNG, CHK) 1.3.2013

The channel break may indicate that lower prices are ahead. A reasonable target could to the September 26th, 2012 gap. This gap is represented in the chart below by the white oval. If one was inclined to take a trade like this, it may be advantageous to sell the UNG ETF. The futures would be an organic way to play price moving down, but the UNG fund has structural problems. The ETF underperforms the future and has a 10-day correlation of only 0.88. This could be explained by the nature of the product.

As displayed below, natural gas has a positively sloped futures curve and as the fund rolls contracts they lose money; put simply.

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

Author

salernoma@mx.lakeforest.edu

Natural Gas Futures Update 1.3.13 Natural Gas Futures Update2 1.3.13

The iPhone6 Rumor Mill 1.3.2013

The report comes from Brian White who is an analyst from Topeka Capital Markets, who believes we will be seeing the new iPhone by June and possibly by May. White also thinks that it could be offered in five new colors including blue, pink, yellow, silver and slate. It would still be offered in white and black but these new colors could be the punch that consumers are looking for!

As for the screen sizes, it looks as though Apple will offer two different sizes, 3.5-inch and 4-inch displays. Currently, the iPhone 5 has a 4-inch display and the iPhone 3/GS had 3.5-inch displays. Who knows, Apple could surprise us with a larger screen than 4-inches but at this moment it is unclear. The most compelling aspect about different screen sizes is that it allows for competitive pricing by Apple. Everyone has competitors, and with the pressure droids are putting on the iPhone this could be the step Apple needs to take to offer it at lower prices.

As great as all of this might sound, we need to keep in mind that theses are just rumors! Analysts aren’t always accurate and sometimes are flat out wrong. It is Apple we are talking about, they love to keep secrets from us. Until we know more from the source itself….

‘Stay Hungry Stay Foolish’

                        -Steve Jobs

Author: Peter Nitso

pnitso@yahoo.com

Twitter: @PeterNitso

Unusual Options Activity Report 1.2.2013

Blog12Paper sold 2334 HCA Feb 32 Calls for $1.05 (2.1 times usual volume)
when stock was trading $31.24
Paper bought 871 TCK Jan 39 Calls for $.56 when stock was trading $38.06
Paper sold 3571 VMED Jan 38 Calls for $.90 (2.1 times usual volume)
when stock was trading $38.44
Paper sold 8388 CAR Feb 20 Calls for $1.50 (11 times usual volume)
when stock was trading $20.90
Paper sold 7350 DYN June 17.5 Puts for $.90 (735 times usual volume)
when stock was trading $19.25

Six Gold (GLD) Charts 1.2.2013

Picture 1

Even with its recent stumble, famous investors like John Paulson and George Soros continue to increase their holdings in the GLD (Dec. 31 closing price: $162.01), the SPDR Gold ETF. Investment management firm Paulson & Co. has a $3 billion+ bet that gold (Jan. 01 10:41pm: $1677.60) shoots through $2000 in 2013, while Soros Fund Management has increased their holdings by nearly 50%. Analysts at the major investment banks have also jumped on the party-wagon, where many have set price targets ranging from $2000 to $4000, with the most ridiculous sitting at $40,000. What they fail to realize is that if gold can’t rally in an environment where central banks are flooding the market with liquidity, what scenario are they waiting for to justify their targets?

Picture 2

Gold has rallied for four years without a major correction (previous one was during the recession). While it is bullish to consolidate after a long bull market, I find it hard to believe that it can sustain another major rally without a notable pullback (30%-40%).

Picture 3 Picture 4 Picture 5

Every bull market eventually stalls. Either the underline fundamentals shift or the market is so saturated with investors already holding the security, that buying interest eventually evaporates (reversal timeframe could vary from weeks to months). Even Apple, which has rallied more than 800% since the recession, has had a 29% correction. Or silver, which corrected 33% in 2011, after rallying nearly 500% from 2009 to 2011. While the fundamentals appear favorable for gold, adding any new positions at current levels should be done with caution.

Picture 6

The GLD recently fell through support (around $162.30) on large volume and had been also trading below its 200 day moving average for over a week. If you’re not already in, wait for a higher high and then add on a pullback. The absolute safest level to establish a position would be around $148-$150 (if you’re patient enough), where bulls are most likely to step in.

Picture 7

While oversold in short term , there is a good possibility that the GLD trades down to the $150 area in 2013, as investors shift to stocks (95% of the major investment banks are extremely optimistic for 2013). Central banks have increased their efforts to stabilize the markets and ‘stimulate growth’. Why would an investor go overweight gold when stocks have recently been the asset that have largely benefitted from their actions? While the Fed has done little to expand its balance sheet in 2012 (that is until QE3 began) gold managed to finish up 6.5% in 2012, while the S&P did double that. If you continue to believe that central banks will keep printing their way to growth, I would argue that exposure to equities is more rational than being overweight gold. Only when earnings growth reverses does that argument get thrown out, where you would then do the reverse.

Picture 8

So what are all those doomsayers shouting about? If the Federal Reserve were to continue to purchase $85 billion in assets every month, their balance sheet would reach astronomical heights by this time next year. Doomsayers believe that the crusade to dissolve the US dollar will eventually cause the currency to collapse and consequently spawn hyper-inflation. However, hoarders of gold (and the GLD) should step back for a second and think about what you would do with gold if fiat currencies ever went out of style. Wouldn’t owning canned/dried food, firearms/ammo and tools make more sense in a chaotic world without paper money?

Getting back to the technicals, my advice is be patient. Wait for gold to break out of its downtrend before jumping in on a pullback. I’d rather be a little late to the party than get in early and wake up one morning and find the GLD down on heavy volume.

By Antony Filippo (Vconomics)