With the market now scraping the absolute top of the 2023 trading range, it’s time to revisit Short Selling School.
We are also solidly into the high-risk, low-return time of the year from May to November. Historically, the total return for the time of year or the past 70 years is precisely zero.
I, therefore, think it is timely to review how to make money when prices are falling. I call it Short Selling School 101
There is nothing worse than closing the barn door after the horses have bolted or hedging after markets have crashed.
No doubt, you will receive a wealth of short selling and hedging ideas from your other research sources and the media right at the next market bottom.
That is always how it seems to play out.
So I am going to get you out ahead of the curve, putting you through a refresher course on how to best trade falling markets now, while stock prices are still rich.
Markets could be down 10% or more by the time this is all over.
There is nothing worse than fumbling around in the dark looking for the matches and candles after a storm has knocked the power out.
I’m not saying that you should sell short the market right here. But there will come a time when you will need to do so.
Watch my Trade Alerts for the best market timing. So here are the best ways to profit from declining stock prices, broken down by security type:
Bear ETFs
Of course the granddaddy of them all is the ProShares Short S&P 500 Fund (SH), a non-leveraged bear ETF that is supposed to match the fall in the S&P 500 point for point on the downside. Hence, a 10% decline in the (SPY) is supposed to generate a 10% gain in the (SH).
In actual practice, it doesn’t work out like that. The ITF has to pay management operating fees and expenses, which can be substantial. After all, nobody works for free.
There is also the “cost of carry,” whereby owners have to pay the price for borrowing and selling short shares. They are also liable for paying the quarterly dividends for the shares they have borrowed, around 2% a year. And then you have to pay the commissions and spread for buying the ETF.
Still, individuals can protect themselves from downside exposure in their core portfolios through buying the (SH) against it (click here for the prospectus). Short selling is not cheap. But it’s better than watching your gains of the past seven years go up in smoke.
Virtually all equity indexes now have bear ETFs. Some of the favorites include the (PSQ), a short play on the NASDAQ (click here for the prospectus), and the (DOG), which profits from a plunging Dow Average (click here for the prospectus).
My favorite is the (RWM), a short play on the Russell 2000, which falls 1.5X faster than the big cap indexes in bear markets (click here for the prospectus).
Leveraged Bear ETFs
My favorite is the ProShares UltraShort S&P 500 (SDS), a 2X leveraged ETF (click here for the prospectus). A 10% decline in the (SPY) generates a 20% profit, maybe.
Keep in mind that by shorting double the market, you are liable for double the cost of shorting, which can total 5% a year or more. This shows up over time in the tracking error against the underlying index. Therefore, you should date, not marry this ETF, or you might be disappointed.
3X Leveraged Bear ETF
The 3X bear ETFs, like the UltraPro Short S&P 500 (SPXU), are to be avoided like the plague (click herefor the prospectus).
First, you have to be pretty good to cover the 8% cost of carry embedded in this fund. They also reset the amount of index they are short at the end of each day, creating an enormous tracking error.
Eventually, they all go to zero and have to be periodically redenominated to keep from doing so. Dealing spreads can be very wide, further adding to costs.
Yes, I know the charts can be tempting. Leave these for the professional hedge fund intraday traders for which they are meant.
Buying Put Options
For a small amount of capital you can buy a ton of downside protection. For example, the April (SPY) $182 puts I bought for $4,872 on Thursday allows me to sell short $145,600 worth of large cap stocks at $182 (8 X 100 X $6.09).
Go for distant maturities out several months to minimize time decay and damp down daily price volatility. Your market timing better be good with these because when the market goes against you, put options can go poof and disappear pretty quickly.
That’s why you read this newsletter.
Selling Call Options
One of the lowest risk ways to coin it in a market heading south is to engage in “buy writes.” This involves selling short call options against stock you already own but may not want to sell for tax or other reasons.
If the market goes sideways or falls, and the options expire worthless, then the average cost of your shares is effectively lowered. If the shares rise substantially they get called away, but at a higher price so you make more money. Then you just buy them back on the next dip. It is a win-win-win.
Selling Futures
This is what the pros do, as futures contracts trade on countless exchanges around the world for every conceivable stock index or commodity. It is easy to hedge out all of the risk for an entire portfolio of shares by simply selling short futures contracts for a stock index.
For example, let’s say you have a portfolio of predominantly large cap stocks worth $100,000. If you sell short 1 June, 2016 contract for the S&P 500 against it, you will eliminate most of the potential losses for your portfolio in a falling market.
The margin requirement for one contract is only $5,000. However, if you are short the futures and the market rises, then you have a big problem, and the losses can prove ruinous.
But most individuals are not set up to trade futures. The educational, financial, and disclosure requirements are beyond mom-and-pop investing for their retirement fund.
Most 401Ks and IRAs don’t permit the inclusion of futures contracts. Only 25% of the readers of this letter trade the futures market. Regulators do whatever they can to keep the uninitiated and untrained away from this instrument.
That said, get the futures markets right, and it is the quickest way to make a fortune if your market direction is correct.
Buying Volatility
Volatility (VIX) is a mathematical construct derived from how much the S&P 500 moves over the next 30 days. You can gain exposure to it through buying the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (VXX) or buying call and put options on the (VIX) itself.
If markets fall, volatility rises, and if markets rise, then volatility falls. You can therefore protect a stock portfolio from losses through buying the (VIX).
I have written endlessly about the (VIX) and its implications over the years. For my latest in-depth piece with all the bells and whistles, please read “Buy Flood Insurance With the (VIX)” by clicking here.
Selling Short IPOs
Another way to make money in a down market is to sell short recent initial public offerings. These tend to go down much faster than the main market. That’s because many are held by hot hands, known as “flippers,” don’t have a broad institutional shareholder base.
Many of the recent ones don’t make money and are based on an, as yet, unproven business model. These are the ones that take the biggest hits.
Individual IPO stocks can be tough to follow to sell short. But one ETF has done the heavy lifting for you. This is the Renaissance IPO ETF (click here for the prospectus). So far, a 6% drop in the main indexes has generated a 20% fall in (IPO).
Buying Momentum
This is another mathematical creation based on the number of rising days over falling days. Rising markets bring increasing momentum while falling markets produce falling momentum.
So, selling short momentum produces additional protection during the early stages of a bear market. Blackrock issued a tailor-made ETF to capture just this kind of move through its iShares MSCI Momentum Factor ETF (MTUM). To learn more, please read the prospectus by clicking here.
Buying Beta
Beta, or the magnitude of share price movements, also declines in down markets. So, selling short beta provides yet another form of indirect insurance. The PowerShares S&P 500 High Beta Portfolio ETF (SPHB) is another niche product that captures this relationship.
The Index is compiled, maintained, and calculated by Standard & Poor's and consists of the 100 stocks from the (SPX) with the highest sensitivity to market movements, or beta, over the past 12 months.
The Fund and the Index are rebalanced and reconstituted quarterly in February, May, August, and November. To learn more, read the prospectus by clicking here.
Buying Bearish Hedge Funds
Another subsector that does well in plunging markets is publicly listed bearish hedge funds. There are a couple of these that are publicly listed and have already started to move.
One is the Advisor Shares Active Bear ETF (HDGE) (click here for the prospectus). Keep in mind that this is an actively managed fund, not an index or mathematical relationship, so the volatility could be large.
With the Volatility Index back down to a bargain $18, I am getting deluged with emails from readers asking if it is time to start hedging portfolios one more time and buying the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short Term Futures ETN (VXX).
The answer is no yet, but soon, possibly very soon.
They are inquiring at absolutely the wrong time.
And here is the problem. When the (VIX) rises, it usually spikes straight up, and then right back down again. This time, it spiked, but has since hung around the $20 level all year rather than collapse back down.
That suggests that there is another leg up to go in volatility until it hits $40 or more before it takes a much-deserved break. That means the stock market has one more sharp selloff left before we hit bottom and bounce.
Markets can ignore trade wars, rising interest rates, the Ukraine War, and international political instability in Taiwan for a while, but not forever. When the time DOES come to pay the piper, prices and volatility will rocket.
Which all brings me to the subject at hand.
If you are new to the service and have no longs, you probably should skip this trade and just watch it as a learning experience.
This can also be a great hedge for any long positions we may want to add in the coming weeks, such as in “peace,” or technology plays.
As I never tire of telling people, no one ever complains when they buy fire insurance and their house doesn’t burn down.
If you are new to this service, don’t freak out. My daily research newsletters are not always about exploring the esoterica of options, or volatility trading.
I’ll let you know when I’m ready to pull the trigger with a Trade Alert.
I am always trying to get better prices.
If you are new to the (VIX) game, please read the educational piece below.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/JohnThomas-Sept20-e1537393647191.png327224MHFTFhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTF2023-01-18 12:04:512023-01-18 13:40:40Shopping for Fire Insurance During a Hurricane
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but the US is now looking at the ugly face of recession. Both oil shocks of the last 50 years promptly delivered serious recessions and the third one could well do the same.
Q1 is now Looking Like a Write Off, as analysts rush to pare forecasts. Some are cutting predictions from 5% growth to zero, or even negative numbers. There will be no sustainable stock market rally until this situation reverses in H2. Keep selling those rallies. There is no denying that oil at $132 is starting to seriously drag on the economy. Here in San Francisco, gasoline has topped $7.00 a gallon. The good news is that high prices will pay for the enormous losses big oil will take writing off hundreds of billions of Russian investments. It will also greatly accelerate the move to electric vehicles. No wonder Tesla (TSLA) is holding up so well.
We may duck the bullet this time because the number of barrels needed to produce a unit of GDP has dropped by half since over the past half-century, thanks to conservation, improved technology, and the advent of electric vehicles. That old Lincoln Continental that guzzled 8 miles a gallon now gets 27.
The big issue will be how long it will take Germany to replace Russian gas. The US can do it easily, but it will take years to build out the infrastructure and build the ships. The big Russian strategic mistake is that they launched their war in the spring, just when German gas needs decline dramatically.
A second Cold War, a third oil shock, and a hot shooting war are a lot for markets to take in in only three weeks. It all means lower share prices….for now. It makes my down 20% target look pretty good.
There is one other matter that may save our bacon. The real economy is still hot, and the world is running out of everything. Oil was going to $130 anyway, even without the war.
Food, housing, materials, commodities, aluminum, steel, lumber, you name it. All are in short supply. And you already own the things these commodities make, like your home, you already have a hedge and a great long-term play.
This is not what recessions are made out of.
The US Bans Russian Oil Imports, and the rush is on to see how fast we can replace German imports. It’s also looking like several hundred billion dollars of Russian investment in illiquid long-term investments will be trapped in the US, such as in real estate, joint ventures, and venture capital. I keep pinching myself to see this WWII replay unfold. The Mad Hedge Market Timing Index just hit a one-year low at 13. Defense stocks are soaring.
Commodity Prices are soaring anywhere Russia is a major supplier. Nickel prices are up 90% and oil hit $133 a barrel. It all throws gasoline on the inflation fire.
Gold breaks $2,000, a new 18-month high, on a massive flight to safety bid. Next stop could be $3,000.
Nickel Prices soar 250%, to $100,000 a metric tonne, with Russia as a major producer. Futures trading is halted on the London Metals Exchange. Who is the biggest user of nickel? China at 59% and the rest of Asia for a further 23%, mostly to produce stainless steel. More supply disruptions to come. US automakers are scrambling, the biggest end-users of stainless steel. Car prices are about to rocket accelerating the move to carbon fiber.
Europe to Cut Russian Gas Purchases by Two Thirds This Year, some 45% of their current gas supply. They will essentially bring their renewable targets forward by a decade, which is moving forward much faster than the US. Oil is just too unreliable to depend on. Some are untried on a mass scale, such as using wind and solar power to electrolyze water to make clean hydrogen. It’s great if they can pull it off.
CPI Inflation Data comes in at a Red Hot 7.9% YOY, a new cycle high and a new 40-year high, and 0.8% for the month of February. Wars are highly inflationary, especially when they come on top of already chronic supply shorts and supply chain disruptions. Bonds are getting crushed. Too bad I’m triple short.
Weekly Jobless Claims come in at 227,000, with Continuing Claims at 1,494,000. Hot jobs demand downplays the risk of the Ukraine war creating any real recession. Repatriation of jobs from abroad will accelerate.
Amazon Splits 20:1, mimicking NVIDIA’s and Tesla’s earlier moves. Although it should make no difference, such splits are always a positive, as more retail investors can buy Alphabet at $145 than $2,900. Option traders too. The split takes place in July
Rents Rise at fastest rate in 30 years. The index for rentals of primary residences as collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics is now the highest since 1987. Rents accounted for 40% of the big jump in the CPI in February. Inflation will get worse before it gets better.
Russian Credit Default Swaps Hit 34% Yields, indicating an extremely high probability of default. Some $100 million in interest payments are due next week, but with virtually all bank accounts frozen and kicked out of SWIFT, they have no means to pay.
The largest holders of Russian debt, like Pimco, Voya, and Capital Group, are taking big hits this morning. Who knows, they might be a BUY here. After all, those defaulted Chinese railroad bonds paid off, pennies on the dollar and 100 years after issue. Are confederate state bonds next?
My Ten-Year View
When we come out the other side of pandemic, we will be perfectly poised to launch into my new American Golden Age, or the next Roaring Twenties. With interest rates still at zero, oil cheap, there will be no reason not to. The Dow Average will rise by 800% to 240,000 or more in the coming decade. The American coming out the other side of the pandemic will be far more efficient and profitable than the old. Dow 240,000 here we come!
With near-record volatility, my February month-to-date performance catapulted to a blistering 15.56%. My 2022 year-to-date performance ended at a chest-beating 30.15%. The Dow Average is down -7.6% so far in 2022. It is the great outperformance on an index since Mad Hedge Fund Trader started 14 years ago.
My only new trade this week was to use a $4.00 dive in the (TLT) to go from a single to a double long in the bond market. That leaves me 60% invested and 50% in cash, waiting for the next capitulation selloff. So, I am 3X short the (TLT), 2X long the (TLT), and 1X long Tesla.
That brings my 13-year total return to 538.24%, some 2.10 times the S&P 500 (SPX) over the same period. My average annualized return has ratcheted up to 44.54%, easily the highest in the industry. Five of six of these positions expire on March 18, in four days.
We need to keep an eye on the number of US Coronavirus cases that's close to 80 million and deaths of around 970,000, which you can find here. Growth of the pandemic has virtually stopped, with new cases down 96% in a month.
On Monday, March 14 at 7:00 AM EST, US Consumer Inflation Expectations for February are printed.
On Tuesday, March 15 at 7:30 AM, the Producer Price Index for February is released. On Wednesday, March 16 at 10:00 AM, the Federal Reserve will announce the first interest rate rise in five years, almost certainly a quarter point.
On Thursday, March 17 at 7:30 AM, Weekly Jobless Claims are published. Housing Starts and Building Permits for February are published. On Friday, March 18 at 7:00 AM, the Existing Home Sales for February are announced. At 2:00 PM, the Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count is out.
As for me, someone commented that I walk kind of funny the other day, and the memories flooded back.
In 1975, The Economist magazine in London heard rumors that a large part of the population was getting slaughtered in Cambodia. We expected this to happen after the fall of Vietnam, but not in the Land of the Khmers. So my editor, Peter Martin, sent me to check it out.
Hooking up with a right-wing guerrilla group financed by the CIA was the easy part. Humping 100 miles in 100-degree heat wasn’t.
We eventually came to a large village that was completely deserted. Then my guide said, “Over here.” He took me to a nearby cave containing the bodies of over 1,000 women, children, and old men that had been there for months.
I’ll never forget that smell.
With the evidence and plenty of pictures in hand, we started the trek back. Suddenly, there was a large explosion and the man 20 yards in front of me disappeared. He had stepped on a land mine. Then the machine gun fire opened up. It was an ambush.
I picked up an M-16 to return fire, but it was bent, bloody, and unusable. I picked up a second rifle and fired until it was empty. Then everything suddenly went black.
I woke up days chained to a palm tree, covered in shrapnel wounds, a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge. Maggots infested my wounds, but I remembered from my Tropical Diseases class at UCLA that I should leave them alone because they only eat dead flesh and would prevent gangrene. That class saved my life. Good thing I got an “A”.
I was given a bowl of rice a day to eat, which I had to gum because it was full of small pebbles and might break my teeth. Farmers loaded their crops with these so the greater weight could increase their income. I spent my time pulling shrapnel out of my legs with a crude pair of plyers.
Two weeks later, the American who set up the trip for me showed up with cases of claymore mines, rifles, ammunition, and antibiotics. My chains were cut and I began the long walk back to Thailand.
It’s nice to learn your true value.
Back in Bangkok, I saw a doctor who attended to the 50 caliber bullet that grazed my right hip. It was too old to sew up so he decided to clean it instead. “This won’t hurt a bit,” he said as he poured in hydrogen peroxide and scrubbed it with a stiff plastic brush.
It was the greatest pain of my life. Tears rolled down my face.
But you know what? The Economist got their story and the world found out about the Great Cambodian Genocide, where 3 million died. There is a museum in Phnom Penh devoted to it today.
So, if you want to know why I walk funny, be prepared for a long story. I still set off metal detectors.
Stay Healthy,
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/john-thomas-cambodia-1975.png622450Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2022-03-14 09:02:422022-03-14 12:57:52The Market Outlook for the Week Ahead, or Recession Fears Arise
Below please find subscribers’ Q&A for the March 2 Mad Hedge Fund Trader Global Strategy Webinar broadcast from Incline Village, Nevada.
Q: Do you think Vladimir Putin will give up?
A: He will either be forced to give up, run out of resources/money, or he will suddenly have an accident. When the people see their standard of living go from a per capita income of $10,000/year today to $1,000—back to where it was during the old Soviet Union—his lifespan will suddenly become very limited.
Q: Would you be buying Invesco Trusts (QQQs) on dips?
A: I think we have a few more horrible days—sudden $500- or $1,000-point declines—but we’re putting in a bottom of sorts here. It may take a month or two to finalize, but the second buying opportunity of the decade is setting up; of course, the other one was two years ago at the pandemic low. So, do your research, make your stock picks now, and once we get another absolute blow-up to the downside, that is your time to go in.
Q: Materials have gone up astronomically, are they still a buy?
A: Yes, on dips. I wouldn't chase 10% or 20% one-week moves up here—there are too many other better trades to do.
Q: Is it time to go long aggressively in Europe?
A: No, because Europe is going to experience a far greater impact economically than the US, which will have virtually none. In fact, all the impacts on the US are positive except for higher energy prices. So, I think Europe will have a much longer recovery in the stock market than the US.
Q: Would you take a flier on a Russian ETF (RSX)?
A: No, most, if not all, of them are about to be delisted because they have been banned or the liquidity has completely disappeared. The (RSX) has just collapsed 85%, from $26 to $4. Virtually all of Russia is for sale, not only stocks, bonds, junk bonds, ETFs, but also joint ventures. ExxonMobil, Shell and BP are all dumping their ownership of Russian subsidiaries as we speak.
Q: Time for a Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) LEAP?
A: No, November was the time for an (FCX) LEAP—we’ve already had a massive run now, up 66% in five months, so wait for the next dip. The next LEAPS are probably going to be in technology stocks in a few months.
Q: My iShares 20 Plus Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) call $130 was assigned, What should I do?
A: Call your broker immediately and tell them to exercise your 127 to cover your short in the 130. They usually charge a few extra fees on that because they can get away with it, but you’ve just made the maximum profit on the position. If you haven’t been exercised yet, that 127/130 call spread will expire at max profit in 10 days.
Q: What if I get my short side called away on a position?
A: Use your long side calls to execute immediately to cover your short side. These call spreads are perfectly hedged positions, same name, same maturity, same size, just different strike prices. If your broker doesn’t hear from you at all, they will just exercise the short call and leave you long the long call, and that can lead to a margin call. So the second you get one of these calls, contact your broker immediately and get out of the position.
Q: Is it safe to put 100% of your money in Tesla (TSLA) for the long term?
A: Only if you can handle a 50% loss of your money at any time. Most people can't. It’s better to wait for Tesla to drop 50%, which it has almost done (it’s gotten down to $700), and then put in a large position. But you never bet all your money on one position under any circumstances. For example, what if Elon Musk died? What would Tesla’s stock do then? It would easily drop by half. So, I’ll leave the “bet the ranch trades” for the younger crowd, because they’re young enough to lose all their money, start all over again, and still earn enough for retirement. As for me, that is not the case, so I will pass on that trade. You should pas too.
Q: Do you foresee NASDAQ (QQQ) being up 5-10% or 10-20% by year-end?
A: I do actually, because business is booming across tech land, and the money-making stocks are hardly going down and will just rocket once the rotation goes back into that sector.
Q: We could see an awful earnings sequence in April, which could put in the final bottom on this whole move.
A: That is right. We need one more good capitulation to get a final bottom in, and then we’re in LEAP territory on probably much of the market. We know we’re having a weak quarter from all the anecdotal data; those companies will produce weak earnings and the year-on-year comparisons are going to be terrible. A lot of companies will probably show down turns in earnings or losses for the quarter, that's all the stuff good bottoms are made out of.
Q: What should we make of the Russian threats of WWIII going Nuclear?
A: I think if Putin gave the order, the generals would ignore it and refuse to fire, because they know it would mean suicide for the entire country. Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) is still in place, and it still works. And by the way, it hasn’t been in the media, but I happen to know that American nuclear submarines with their massive salvos of MIRVed missiles, have moved much closer to Russian waters. So, you're looking at a war that would be over in 15 minutes. I think that would also be another scenario in which they replace Putin: if he gives such an order. This has actually happened in the past; people without top secret clearance don’t know this but Boris Yeltsen actually gave an order to launch nuclear missiles in the early 90s when he got mad at the US about something. The generals ignored it, because he was drunk. And something else you may not know is that 95% of the Russian nuclear missiles don’t work—they don’t have the GDP to maintain 7,000 nuclear weapons at full readiness. Plutonium is one of the world’s most corrosive substances and very expensive to maintain. Only a wealthy country like the US could maintain that many weapons because it’s so expensive. So no, you don’t need to dig bomb shelters yet, I think this stays conventional.
Q: Banks like (JPM), (BAC), AND (MS) are at a low—are they a buy?
A: Yes, but not yet; wait for more shocks to the system, more panic selling, and then the banks are absolutely going to be a screaming buy because they are on a long-term trend on interest rates, strong economy, lowering defaults—all the reasons we’ve been buying them for the last year.
Q: Should I short bonds or should I buy Freeport up 60%?
A: Short bonds. Next.
Q: Should I buy Europe or should I short bonds?
A: Short bonds. That should be your benchmark for any trade you’re considering right now.
Q: How much and how quickly will we see a collapse in defense stocks?
A: Well, you may not see a collapse in defense stocks, because even if Russia withdraws from Ukraine, they still are a newly heightened threat to the West, and these increases in defense spending are permanent. That’s why the stocks have gone absolutely ballistic. Yeah sure, you may give up some of these monster gains we’ve had in the last week, but this is a dip-buying sector now after being ignored for a long time. So yes, even if Russia gives up, the world is going to be spending a lot more on defense, probably for the rest of our lives.
Q: Just to confirm, LEAP candidates are Boeing (BA), UPS (UPS), Caterpillar (CAT), Disney (DIS), Delta Airlines (DAL)?
A: I would say yes. You may want to hold off, see if there’s one more meltdown to go; or you can buy half now and half on either the next meltdown or the melt-up and get yourself a good average position. And when I say LEAPS, I mean going out at least a year on a call spread in options on all of these things.
Q: Is $143 short safe on the (TLT)?
A: Definitely, probably. In these conditions, you have to allow for one day, out of the blue, supers pikes of $3 like we got last week, or $5 trins week, only to be reversed the next day. The trouble is even if it reverses the next day, you’re still stopped out of your position. So again, the message is, don’t be greedy, don’t over-leverage, don’t go too close to the money. There’s a lot of money to be made here, but not if you blow all your profits on one super aggressive trade. And take it from someone who’s learned the hard way; you want to be semi-conservative in these wild trading conditions. If you do that, you will make some really good money when everyone else is getting their head handed to them.
Q: Would you go in the money or out of the money for Boeing (BA) and Caterpillar (CAT)?
A: It just depends on your risk tolerance. The best thing here is to do several options combinations and then figure out what the worst-case scenario is. If you can handle that worst-case scenario without stopping out, do those strikes. These LEAPS are great, unless you have to stop out, and then they will absolutely kill you. And usually, you only do these with sustained uptrends in place; we don’t have that yet which is why I’m saying, watch these LEAPS. Don’t necessarily execute now, or if you do, just do it in small pieces and leg in. That is the smart answer to that.
Q: What’s the probability that the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) makes a new high in the next 2 weeks?
A: I give it 50/50.
Q: Call options on the VIX?
A: No, that’s one of the super high-risk trades I have to pass on.
Q: How low can the VIX go down this month?
A: High ten’s is probably a worst-case scenario.
Q: LEAPS on Barrick Gold Corporation (GOLD)?
A: No, that was a 3-month-ago trade. Now it’s too late, never consider a LEAP at an all-time high or close to it.
Q: Time to short oil?
A: Not yet. We have some spike top going on in oil. It’s impossible to find the top on this because, while bottoms are always measurable with PE multiples and such, tops are impossible to measure because then you’re trying to quantify human greed, which can’t be done. So yeah, I would stand by; it’s something you want to sell on the way down. This is the inverse of catching a falling knife.
To watch a replay of this webinar with all the charts, bells, whistles, and classic rock music, just log in to www.madhedgefundtrader.com , go to MY ACCOUNT, click on GLOBAL TRADING DISPATCH, then WEBINARS, and all the webinars from the last ten years are there in all their glory.
Good Luck and Stay Healthy.
John Thomas
CEO & Publisher
The Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader
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