We’re looking for a “free ride” higher in a media/internet stock that looks set to break out.
[Options Premium] Relative Strength in a Sector Ready to Bounce
The markets are engaging in some sideways chop thanks to whatever headlines we’re ignoring. Meanwhile, there are some oversold sectors showing signs of some mean-reversion. And within one of those sectors, we’ve got a stock setting up with a pretty straight forward reward-to-risk opportunity.
[Options Premium] Hug That Line
The drama queens have been in full force this weekend coming into the opening of trading this Monday morning. Here was my observation after rolling out of bed:
Geez, I shoulda checked $ES_F before I checked my twitter stream this morning.
FinTwit: THE MARKET IS CRASHING. ARMAGEDDON!!!
Futures: Down 6. Barely a rounding error.
Back to bed.
— Sean McLaughlin, NLD 📈 (@chicagosean) June 3, 2019
I rarely seek to be contrarian simply for the sake of being contrarian, but the mini hysteria I’m sensing amongst market participants feels a little hollow. Is everyone too leveraged? You’re not trading based off headlines are you? …are you??
If so, knock it off. Scared money don’t make money.
With the S&P 500 re-acquainting itself with it’s 200-day moving average, here’s how we’re going to play it… [Read more…]
[Options Premium] Positions Review Headed into June Expiration
As we head into June Expiration, there are a number of open positions with options expiring in June that may need some attention. Generally speaking as we approach any expiration, it is a Best Practice to begin aggressively weeding out or rolling out positions that aren’t working. Why? For long premium plays, unless positions are comfortably in-the-money, theta decay will begin to accelerate and whatever premium is left in our options will quickly disappear. For short premium plays where we haven’t yet reached our profit target, gamma becomes our enemy making our position more sensitive to fluctuations of the underlying. A small winner/loser could quickly get away from us. Best to roll it out to the next monthly expiration cycle to buy ourselves more time, or close it down and look for newer/better opportunities.
In no particular order, here are some currently open positions with June options that we’ll be looking to take action on next week: [Read more…]
[Options Premium] The Guiding Hand
We’re tracking a household name that — with the exception of four wild days during the Christmas nadir — has been riding it’s 200-day moving average quietly higher and is setting up for what could be a big move. [Read more…]
[Options Premium] Long Play Short Leash
When you’re bullish on a name and options prices — in terms of volatility — are the cheapest they’ve been all year, the prudent move is often the simplest move: buy longer-dated calls. And the decision is even simpler when you have a clearly defined level to show you where the trade idea is busted. [Read more…]
[Options Premium] Riding the Diagonal Track
In a recent report, the All Star Charts team highlighted some mixed signals and the lack of trend in many areas of the stock market right now. These are often frustrating situations for straight stocks players. Luckily for us options traders, we can craft strategies that best suit any market environment we may be in. For today’s play, we’re going to get a little creative, mixing a credit spread with a calendar spread to establish a unique risk profile in a name that we’re cautiously bullish on. [Read more…]
[Options Premium] Base Tractor
In a recent blog post, All Star Charts highlighted a stock retesting a breakout from a very large base. This was the money quote:
First off, big bases take time to form because they are caused by steady institutional accumulation. Mom and pop investors aren’t the ones creating this trend, so I know that there’s underlying demand that will support prices if they do move lower.
Because prices have memory and the base has taken a significant period of time to build, there’s likely been more trading at each price level along the way. As a result of this institutional support, the rate of change to the downside is likely to be less severe versus a name that’s advanced quickly to the upside with less trading activity at each level, and thus less memory among market participants to defend these levels on the way down.
Secondly, our risk is extremely well-defined when trading these patterns. In the event that we are buying a base breakout (or pullback), we know exactly where we are wrong and can generally minimize our risk relative to potential reward.
This is precisely the scenario we see unfolding in Tractor Supply Co $TSCO. [Read more…]
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