EWZ
THE WEEK AHEAD: NIO EARNINGS; XOP, EWZ PREMIUM SELLINGMy screeners aren't showing me a ton of things for either earnings-related volatility contraction plays and/or just Plain Jane premium selling, so I'm largely looking just to work what I have on, do any adjustments that are necessary, and wait for a higher volatility environment (VIX is at sub-15 here) to deploy capital back into premium selling.
The Chinese "Tesla killer" NIO (82/136) announces in two days and with a background implied clocking in at 136, who can resist putting something on. Pictured here is a fairly delta neutral 11 Short Straddle in the April expiry that is paying a whopping 4.18 at the mid (1.04 at 25% max) with break evens that encompass most of the underlying's whole data set -- 6.82 to 15.18. Even skewed to the call side, the net delta is -2.59 with a theta metric of 4.08.
Obvious alternative plays:
April 18th 7/11/11/15 iron fly: 3.10 at the mid, max loss of .90 versus max profit of 3.10 (.78 at 25% max), delta -.97, theta 1.43. I would note the rarity of the substantially better than risk one to make one metrics of this setup.
April 18th 7 short put, .72 at the mid with a downside break even of 6.28.
On the exchange-traded fund front, the vast majority of underlyings are at the very low end of their 52-week ranges, with the highest implied underlyings in XOP (16/30) and EWZ (10/30), which again militates in favor of not putting on a ton of nondirectional premium selling stuff here.
I did look at ASHR, which did stick out at 75/34, but the options chains in April, May, and July have wanky strikes (i.e., the April 28th 27.71 (WTF?) short straddle), and I don't like having to roll from "wanky" to an even Steven strike if I have to. If I'm going to play China, it's going to be in the more liquid FXI (16/21), which doesn't suffer from similar oddities that make trading it potentially harder than it has to be.
UPDATE: Brazil (EWZ) is now up 48%, reduce RISKLast July I put out a video suggesting that Brazil was a great opportunity to allocate capital (linked below). At the time the business cycle had turned from contraction to expansion and from a technical standpoint, we were sitting on support.
Today, +48.6% higher the risk is rising, the cycle is still relatively strong but our technicals are suggesting we reduce risk here.
Buy Anim3 on bullish flagAfter freezing itself from a clear downward channel, Anim3 confirmed major inverted head and shoulders bottom pattern. Now, there may be a short swing trade buy opportunity as ANIM3 just confirmed bullish flag pattern with strong volume, continuing medium to longterm rising trend.
BUY JSLG3 on Beautiful Inverse Head and Shoulders BottomBUY JSLG3 on textbook Inverse Head and Shoulders Bottom: broke out from neckline, made brief pullback, and now strongly up again. Minimum target around 13 (projected amplitude of head and shoulders figure from neckline), but fundamentally the stock may go much higher if macroeconomic conditions in Brazil improve more than expected.
Looking for EWZ to retrace as it should. Patience on re-entry.Trading EWZ with options.
Calenders and Verticals in specific.
looking for a retrace so im open ended on the position to the down side.
Im long term Bullish.
Short term Bearish.
Also note, if retracement actually matures, it will leave a bearish formation producing resistance levels.
The market will have to fight back a little harder to bring back the current high levels.
GL luck all
Head and Shoulders Pattern on Brazilian Real = TailwindEWZ is a derivative of the Brazilian stock market ( IBOV ) and the USD/BRL relationship. There is a clear head and shoulders pattern developing in the Brazilian Real. The drop in the Real should provide a tailwind for Brazilian stocks. On top of that, the IBOV just broke out above 90,000. I see continued upside in EWZ and BRZU as a result. This can be seen in the clear bullish channel in the EWZ chart
EWZ - Brazil breaking outThe Latino Trump was inaugurated, and it looks like EWZ (Brazil ETF) is now breaking our of a bull flag similar to last year. Can't say I'm bullish on the market, but this might be a good short term trade. Long EWZ Jan 11 calls. I've been playing with EWZ for a while, surprising amount of liquidity in options for EWZ (Brazil) and EWW (Mexico).
Also long on XRT and GM, but I think we're looking at day trades there.... closing both when GM or SPY closes the morning gap.
For those following me.... flipped the MNK and FB puts on open, as usual.
EWZ: Ready to move up from here after consolidating?$EWZ looks poised to rally above the 'Temer almost impeached' fundamental key levels.
These 3 price levels acted as key support and resistance zones since the market bottomed as per my previous publication, good time to rebuy Brazilian stocks. Bolsonaro being elected president might please investors in the long run, is what I think.
Cheers,
Ivan Labrie.
Short EWZ setup (Brazil index)Brazil has been bullish lately with elections and central bank lifting interest rates. $USDBRL has been down for quite a lot. However, the move is short term, here is why:
1. Brazil cannot sustain high interest rate for such big deficit (it's not financially strong as U.S)
2. Election effect is priced in and will be gone after the event. Although the candidates are all business friendly(it seems), the effect will need to build over time, not in 2 months.
Watch for exhaustion at 44-46 level for a short set up for continued downside. Weekly cloud suggests bearish price action ahead in 2019.
EWZ NOV 16TH 34C/39P INVERTED SHORT STRANGLEJust updating an EWZ trade that I started out some time ago as an iron fly (See Post Below). Currently, it's morphed into an inverted November 16th 34C/39P -- a 5-wide, inverted short strangle that I've collected 6.87/contract in credits to date.
Currently, this broken setup is valued at 7.16, so if I closed it out here for 7.16, I'd realize a small and very tolerable loss. The max I can earn on it is 1.87 (total credits received minus the width of the inversion -- five).
With a current theta of 5.36, I'm going to hang in with it a few more days ... .
BUY SNSL3 On double bottom and breakout from negative trend lineBUY SNSL3 On double bottom and breakout from negative trend line. MACD highly divergent.
THE WEEK AHEAD: DAL, C, JPM, WFC EARNINGS; EWZ, TLT/TBTAlthough the earnings season has already kicked off modestly, a bevvy of financials announce next week: C, JPM, and WFC (all on Friday). I generally don't play these underlyings for volatility contraction around earnings primarily because the implied volatility just doesn't ramp up to the degree I'd like to see for a play. I thought I'd mention them here since there will be possible broad sector (XLF) impact depending on how these earnings go -- i.e., there could be a play that develops in one of these underlyings post-announcement or in the sector as a whole that may be worth playing.
Other Earnings: DAL (rank 41/30-day 32) announces earnings on Thursday before market open. The metrics don't look promising here for a directionally neutral premium selling play, but I could see going for something bullish if earnings experience engine failure and crash into the 52-week low around 48 and implied volatility remains high such that a bullish assumption play would be productive (e.g., short puts, Jade Lizard, etc.).
Although there are some other single names that are "ripe" for a volatility contraction play right here (TSLA (earnings in 31) comes to mind), my general tendency is to resist the urge to put plays on in single name with earnings announcements that are near the monthly and instead wait until the eve of the announcement. With a rank of 99 and implied of >100%, though, it's understandably tough to sit on one's hands and wait.
On the Exchange-Trade Fund Front:
Brazil is voting today, so it's likely that you're too late to get into a volatility contraction play that may evolve after the results are finalized (the time to have put that play on was last week). That being said, it's also possible that EWZ gets even more volatile depending on the outcome, even though implied volatility is at the top of its 52-week range at 56.2%.
The financial media has returned to covering 10-year T note yield hand-wringing and/or the spiking of bond yields in general as a general, explanatory theme of why the broad market gave some up last week. TLT broke through long-term support at 116 last week, cratering to 113. I was previously shorting TLT from the 122 level via put diagonals, but it appears that play may have temporarily played out in the absence of some risk-off event that drives treasuries back up. I will continue to short TLT on retrace, but there is little that sticks out to me in terms of horizontal resistance other than 122 and 116, and I'm hesitant to short from 116, since it literally just broke that level "seconds ago" in the scheme of things.
Extremes Prime Prospects for Market Bounce, Oversold LoomsAT40 = 33.8% of stocks are trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs) (was as low 31.9%)
AT200 = 47.8% of stocks are trading above their respective 200DMAs
VIX = 14.0 (was as high as 15.8)
Short-term Trading Call: neutral
Commentary
The S&P 500 is only 1.0% off its all-time high, yet extremes and critical tests of support abound.
AT40 (T2108), the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs), dropped to a fresh 6-month low and closed at 33.8%. AT40 has warned of underlying weakness in the stock market since it sliced through 40% and broke the lower bound of a multi-month range. At the time, I was more focused on the potential bullish implications of the S&P 500’s ability to hold 20DMA support at the same time AT40 slipped…
“So on a relative basis, the S&P 500 (SPY) is not likely to go much lower from here without a specific and very bearish catalyst. The S&P 500’s ability to levitate above its uptrending 20DMA adds to the impression that support will hold.”
The S&P 500 is only a mere 0.4% lower from that point BUT 20DMA support gave way. It was a rare down day on which the S&P 500 lost more than 1% at one point. Buyers stepped in at the lows and closed the index with a 0.8% loss. The S&P 500 even came close to recovering its 20DMA support.
The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) DID break through 50DMA support but buyers managed to close the index right on top of it.
The S&P 500 managed to bounce away from 50DMA support, and the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) held 50DMA support, yet the NASDAQ was not so fortunate.
These major indices effectively created a cascade toward critical 50DMA support. Along the way, small caps continue to roll over with 50DMA resistance fading away in the rear view mirror. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) lost another 1.4% and closed at a 3+ month low. A test of 200DMA support seems imminent.
Together, this selling looks like a recipe for a larger sell-off with small caps and now the NASDAQ leading the way lower. However, AT40 closed at 33.8% and was as low as 31.8%. For the last two years in particular, these levels have represented “close enough” to oversold with two important exceptions from the February swoon and the election related sell-off in 2016 (see longer-term chart at the bottom of this post).
The volatility index, the VIX, added to the case for an imminent bounce. The VIX soared as much as an extreme 36.4% before volatility faders stepped in to push the fear gauge to a 20.7% close underneath the 15.35 pivot. If recent patterns hold, this move suggests the latest surge in fear has already exhausted itself. In deference to the volatility faders, I quickly took profits on my latest tranche of call options on ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures (UVXY). I also did not want to make a bet on the jobs report delivering news strong enough to sustain higher volatility.
Noted VIX expert Bill Luby also thought the market hit extremes and called for a bottom. I agree with Luby that a bottom here is very likely, but I do not think it will be a sustainable bottom.
Soaring interest rates have made me more circumspect. I think financial markets need to adjust to an environment where the 10-year U.S. Treasury stays above 3% and continues higher. That is, more fear needs to appear. As long as the market leaders are able to keep the S&P 500 levitating above 50DMA support, I am doubtful such fear can get exorcised.
Thursday’s spike in rates cut iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) by 0.7% and sent it to a 4-year low. The weekly chart below shows the speed of recent losses.
This move seemed quite extreme, so I decided to triple down on my TLT call options in anticipation of a potential snap back bounce. Friday’s jobs report should play an important role in determining whether rate fears take a break or not. Any strength pointing toward higher inflation will grease more skids across the market.
If the jobs report stays out of the way, then the technicals have the market set up for a bounce. The market just needs an excuse. Beaten down stocks are likely to benefit greatly from a bounce whereas the S&P 500 could be tightly capped by its recent all-time high. In other words, I suspect that a rally from here will be short-lived and the ultimate destination for the market is a true oversold reading (AT40 below 20%). I left the short-term trading call at neutral to reflect my expectation for a small bounce. Assuming AT40 rebounds sharply enough to at least 50%, I will likely look for fades at or near the S&P 500’s all-time high and downgrade the short-term trading call accordingly.