|
7/19/2009 7:59:32 AM
Summary of Position For July
On June 23 we suggested a full position in a July 980/990 SPX Call Spread
for a net credit of $0.50 and a half position in a July 770/760 SPX Put Spread
for a net credit of $0.40. If you entered this, the premium you received was
$70 per $1,000 of capital utilized, i.e. 7.0% before commissions for
4 weeks in the position.
The official CBOE settlement price for the July SPX options was 940.03.
Current Position:
Nil
Current Performance for 2009:
| Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
| 6.0% |
8.0% |
4.0% |
2.5% |
6.0% |
10% |
7.0% |
|
|
|
|
|
(Please note, this performance is raw,
i.e. without brokerage/commissions taken into account)
General Commentary:
The system remains on a Neutral signal.
If someone had said this time last week that the market would rise 7% next
week, you'd have thought they were crazy. We had various signs giving the impression
that the market was about to break down, the head and shoulders top, the break
(and close below) of support and a lower low.
So what happened?
The market simply loves to do the unexpected, unexpected in terms of what
seems obvious on surface appearances. For the S&P, the head and shoulders
pattern was being widely broadcast on CNBC and it seems the crowd was positioned
for the worst. When the worst didn't happen and prices continued higher, short
covering began (certainly spurred on by the positive earnings and guidance
reports).
The thing is though, if you look a little below the surface of appearances
you can usually find the truth. While it seemed logical to be positioned short
before this move higher began, there were signs developing that the key support
would hold (discussed last week). I don't think many would have suspected the
speed and degree of the rise, although this is not out of the ordinary in short
covering instances.
For the week ahead, the crowd is getting a little too bullish and I suspect
that we're due for a consolidation, which could come in the form of a short
sharp move lower (in the order of around a 4% drop on the S&P). If that
happens, evidence is building that this will be a good point to go long. From
this services' perspective, the current sideways market has been ideal, but
the sideways pattern is probably close to ending soon so stay tuned on how
we'll be positioning for the month ahead.
On to the analysis...
SPX Chart - Bigger Picture

The bigger picture is maintaining its range bound trading, even in the face
of a 7% rise last week. Having said that, it's now at a point where a decision
will be made on the next mid term move.
If we close above 950, the downtrend and horizontal resistance will be broken
and the linear MACD will continue above zero, all clearly bullish. On the other
hand, if we start to drift lower and the MACD crosses over, we're likely to
see a significant mover lower. It'll probably still take a couple weeks before
we know the definitive answer though.
SPX Chart - Shorter Picture

The shorter term has done a U turn to where we were last week and while the
MACD has had a bullish cross over, prices seem to be extended and in need of
a breather.
It's possible that we get to 950 early in the week ahead but I wouldn't be
surprised if we begin a sharp turn lower. Ideally a drop to 905 to close the
gap from Wednesday (50% retracement of the current move) and if prices can
find support around the 900 - 910 region, it may be a great point to go long.
For the week ahead, support on the SPX is 900 - 925 and resistance is 950.
The VIX Picture

Given the strength in the markets last week, the VIX has not actually broken
down by as much as one would have thought, in fact Wednesday gap up in the
markets had the VIX finish higher on the day.
The MACD is still showing the potential of large divergence, which could be
negative for the markets in the week ahead. Having said that, while the VIX
remains below the 50 DMA, the bulls remain in control for the markets.
The VIX measures the premiums investors are willing to pay for option
contracts and is essentially a measure of fear i.e. the higher the VIX, the
higher the fear in the market place. It tends to move inversely with the
markets.
Quote of the Week:
The quote this week is from Mahatma Gandhi, "Freedom is not worth having if
it does not include the freedom to make mistakes."
Feel free to email me at angelo@stockbarometer.com with
any questions or comments.
Also, if you are receiving these alerts on a free trial, you have access to
all of our previous articles and recommendations by clicking
here. If you do not recall your username and/or password, please email
us at customersupport@stockbarometer.com.
If you are interested in continuing to receive our service after your free
trial, please click
here.
|