Seeking Alpha

Wow, day 10 already?

What an exciting year 2011 has been already. Last Monday we predicted we'd be following the chart on the right where we had a big opening day and then some violent up and down swings that actually have the amazing net effect of LOWERING the Volatility Index (VIX) as Lloyd Blankfein continues to do God’s work by running the same Alpha 2 program he ran last year to herd the sheep into the slaughter that followed January’s option expiration day (Jan 19th).

This time, things will be different – because options expiration day is the 21st. Other than that, so far, not so different with the Dow gaining the exact same 200 points in the first week of the month, finishing on that same down note we had the first full week’s Friday of 2010. The danger to this pattern is the dollar – which is breaking up ahead of schedule and, as discussed in-depth in this week’s Stock World Weekly, the dollar rules the markets and even the mighty Goldman Sachs TradeBots can’t fight the multi-Trillion Dollar daily Forex market for long.

Last year, the dollar didn’t pop 81.50 until March, when we were already recovering from the market dip. This morning, the dollar is already drifting over 81.50 and looks like it may head higher, as the Euro is testing its lowest levels ($1.28) since early September, when we were having a bit of a rough patch in the market. Since then, the euro was up 10% and the U.S. markets went up 10% (what a coincidence!) but now the euro is back down 10% and the TradeBots are working overtime just to keep us on track. Who will break first? This is very exciting stuff but, it looks like the rest of the world is beating us to it so far:

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Wow, that Baltic Dry Index does not look good, does it? According to Bloomberg, freight rates for commodity shipping are at the lowest price since 2002, when China’s economy was 75% smaller and the S&Ps GSCI commodity index was 67% lower. What can this mean? Well, for one thing it means that all this commodity trading that’s driving up prices has NOTHING to do with demand and is NOTHING but speculators trading bits of paper back and forth while the supply sits in warehouses, waiting fruitlessly for a customer to show up. What will break first? Will customers suddenly come bursting through the doors to buy stockpiled commodities at record high prices or will short sellers begin to dog-pile on the commodity markets and break the backs of the speculators the way they broke housing and oil and then, LEH and BSC in 2008?

The Shanghai composite lost another 1.6% this morning with the Hang Seng right behind it with a 0.7% drop. Note those blue support lines that are breaking are 20-day moving averages while the reds are 50s with the Baltic Dry, Shanghai and India already collapsing and Germany and France only a couple of bad days away from a breakdown so we’ll be watching that 23,500 line on the Hang Seng as a Global "must hold" fulcrum for the global economy this month.

Hugh Hendry, who painted a great image this weekend by saying "I see Japan as a nuclear bomb strapped onto the chest of the global economy" is buying CDSs betting on the default of Nippon Steel (NISTY.PK), JFE Holdings and other Japanese companies he feels have extremely underrated risk profiles due to heavy ties to China’s economy.

Hendry is now focusing his rhetoric — and investing strategy — on the bigger target: China. He’s betting that growth in the world’s No. 2 economy will collapse because of rampant real-estate speculation, sending shock waves through Asia and beyond. The problem, Hendry says, is that China’s gross domestic product growth isn’t matched by wealth creation at home. In his doom-laden scenario, a plunge in Chinese stock prices and property values will be exacerbated by a softening demand for the country’s exports, triggering an extended period of global deflation and slower growth.

A slump in the price of Japanese bank shares shows that Hendry may be on to something. The Topix Banks Index, which tracks Japanese banks, sank on Nov. 1st to its lowest level since at least 1983, when Bloomberg first tracked the data, as demand for loans dropped in a sluggish economy. The index has trailed the benchmark MSCI World Bank Index since mid-2009. Hendry promoted his downbeat view on China by traveling to that country’s major cities with a video camera in the spring of 2009. His report, in which he pointed out numerous empty skyscrapers, has been viewed nearly 100,000 times on YouTube.com – a story we’ve been tracking on PSW as well.

Of course, Hendry is not the only person painting a gloomy scenario. This weekend, the American Economics Association gathered in Denver to discuss, in my opinion, way too many topics but some I found interesting including Ethics (must have been the humorous opening), Asset Bubbles, Health Insurance, Price Dynamics, Price Fixing, Environmental Subsidies, Child Development, 1931′s Currency Crisis, 100 Years of U.S. Bank Panics 1825-1929, Business Cycle Synchronization, Sovereign Risks, Measuring Happiness as a Policy Tool, Corporate Taxation and hundreds of other papers that will take the rest of the year just to read. What I find very amusing is the way that various media outlets are using this conference to make broad points, as if thousands of economists got together and made a statement when, in actual fact, the vast majority of them were gathered in tiny little classrooms reading papers to each other although they were all very happy to speak on behalf of the majority whenever a microphone was shoved in their faces – perhaps they missed the lecture on ethics ...

Hopefully, I don’t have to tell you to ignore economists. The average economist has about as much chance of being right as the average English Professor has of writing the next great American novel or the average Music teacher has of winning American Idol. This is nothing against teachers, but just because someone is "an economist" doesn’t mean they know very much about the economy. As rock-star Economist John Maynard Keynes once said: "The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist."

According to Stock World Weekly, POMO runs out on Tuesday with a new schedule due at 2pm Wednesday. Meanwhile, The Bernank will drop $18Bn on the IBanks today and tomorrow so don’t expect this morning’s dip to last and we also get the Fed’s Beige Book on Wednesday, which is always a good market mover we love to follow. According to SWW, the week’s economic calendar’s highlights look a little like this:

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In addition to all that excitement, we finally get some earnings but it’s light this week with Alcoa (AA) kicking off the big boys tonight bookmarked by JP Morgan Chase (JPM) Friday morning but, other than Intel (INTC) on Thursday, not too much excitement this week. NEXT WEEK, on the other hand, we have about 100 reports right into expiration day with Citigroup (C), Cree (CREE), IBM (IBM) and Apple (AAPL) all on Tuesday and a lot of financials in what is bound to be a very exciting expiration week.

We’ll see if Lloyd’s Alpha 2 can hold the markets together this week. We still have to get to Dow 12,000 and, of course, Russell 800 to make an impression that breaks last year’s scary image and that’s going to be very, very hard with the Dollar over 81.50 so step one is to pull out all the stops to break the buck. BP has already begun the process by shutting down the Alaska Pipeline, cutting off 650,000 barrels a day of oil imports to the mainland U.S.. That has driven oil back to $90, where we’ll be shorting it again as this is a sucker’s play as the NYMEX traders desperately attempt to dump the ridiculous 600M barrels of oil they have piled up in false orders for the front three months of trading (Feb-April).

BP has already been implicated in trading scandals so let’s not get all shocked that they would cut off oil supplies to the U.S. in order to manipulate the prices on the NYMEX when there’s an embarrassing build-up of inventory. Now, if only there were a copper pipeline someone could fake, then FCX could hold $117.50 but, as I said, it’s all about the dollar there and it will be for oil too as we seem to have hit the point ($90 oil) at which consumers stop buying oil faster than the U.S. energy cartel can stop producing and importing it (new year-low numbers of imports again last week).

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Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_18.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Let’s be careful out there.

This article is tagged with: Macro View, Economy, Market Outlook, United States
From Philip Davis:

USO, QQQ- Phil, thanks for these plays. Out of USO for about 65% gain today and just keeping 1/4 QQQ.

- Ksone88, July 14, 2011  


Phil, You were on the $ today with your calls almost exactly on the turns – Krap kuhn krup (Thai for thank you very much).

- Jomptien, July 14, 2011  


Thanks for the USO directions today. Made it 3 times (up/down/up) for a very nice win.

- Doro165, August 2, 2011  


Phil, I don’t know how I can thank you enough for your guidance this past week. I’m up significantly in my portfolio and I’ve never been so relaxed watching the market panic. Thanks once again for being here for us.

- thechaser, August 2, 2011  


Oil – thanks Phil, got in late at 0.53 on the 38p today, set a sell for 0.75 and took the dog for a walk – 70% gain and more than enough $$ to buy dog food. TZA Aug 35/40 BCS – closed out for a 100% gain in under a month – thanks again for introducing me to these trades.

- CanuckBob, August 2, 2011  


GOOG, NFLX and AAPL all bought last hour Friday. Sold into the excitement the first hour today for an average of 15% on the options. And lots of them. Thanks again Phil for teaching me so well.

- lflantheman, August 2, 2011  


Your board has been fantastic helping the less experienced (includes me) navigate through all the turmoil. The contributions from your members has been well rounded, objective, and extremely helpful. Sans the politics you have built a fantastic community and that is a tribute to you. I thank you and all fellow members for there contributions over the past few days. Fantastic group!

- dclark41, August 3, 2011  


Phil – Not that you dont usually, but you have DEFINITELY earned your money this week. THe recommendations have been PERFECT. Selling into the initial excitement (MULTIPLE TIMES), hedges, everything. Im reading this when I get home from work and want to cry b/c I cant trade at work! I might have to start getting up at 3 AM though to catch those trades bc youre killing it then too! May you and yours have a blessed weekend!

- Jromeha, August 5, 2011  


On Optrader’s section yesterday he was asked how he works with AAPL as an investment. He replied that he just ‘plays with the covers’. I’ve got a separate portfolio where I use primarily this technique over the past 6 months. Up 60% The principles involved are stock selection, patience, patience, using covers to protect profits, rolling covers to maximize premium return, and exiting when covers are gone and stock price is high. Sometimes it’s hard to remember where you learn to do this stuff, but much of it is from integrating principles I’ve learned here with thing I already knew. Thanks for the help on this, Phil and others.

- Iflantheman, August 8, 2011  


Thank God for Phil. A few months ago (April) I didn´t even know what hedging was, and someone recommended I should check out some of Phil´s plays, especially on the retirement portfolio. When I first started to read it, none of it made a blind bit of sense to me, but I stuck with it and gradually began to work through some of the trades to see how it worked. Now I am putting on 5:1 SPY backspreads combined with bear put spreads, entering and leaving positions after consulting the VIX, and engaging in other esoteric maneuvers that are keeping my portfolio above water.

- jmm1951, August 18, 2011  


I took $2 (up 133%) and ran on those USO puts, quite a bit more than the 20 you played in the $25KP. Thank you once again for turning a bad market week into a great personal week. You will be happy to know I am back to cashy and cautious with a few of your favorite longs into the weekend. Thanks to Phil, JRW and all the members who share their knowledge here.

- Dennis, August 18, 2011  


Phil, I just wanted to say thanks for being there. The world needs more of you. Your site continues to positively change my life daily.

- Chasw, October 18, 2011  


GIVE THANKS/PHIL Have not done my 10,000 hours, but a couple of years at PSW, and moved from fishing with a single line to owner of a commercial trawler (metaphorically speaking). Now I fish with many lines. It is amazing when you go over the same information time and time again, eventually it clicks. Like planting trees; being the house, 20% sale items, selling into the excitement. and patience. I just sold an AAPL Jan 12 340/390 BCS financed by the sales of Jan 12 275 Put. The trade was put on one year ago for a net credit and exited five minutes ago for a 49 dollar per contract profit. No point in waiting till opex to see what happens, and I will just sell 10 of those VLO puts to make myself net the round 50. I no longer worry about opex coming as I have adjusted well in time for most positions that go against me. I still make some howlers (RIMM, TBT, TRGT) but I play the percentages and my winners outdistance my losers by many miles. I would never be in this position if it were not for Phil. He is a treasure, pure and simple. The goose that lays the golden egg if we care to listen and practice. Phil, a mighty big thank you.

- Winston, January 5, 2012  


It is amazing how much confidence you engender, Phil………..I knew the 1% a day trades and repeated often were possible as I had done in stretches, and I knew kill zone trades were also possible and 5% to 10% returns per month were very possible with practice, experience and smart risk management all without having to take a lot of risk, but I guess I was talking to the disbelievers and since I have dropped them into my 'why bother to try to explain it' file and come over to the dark side at PSW I feel soooo much more content not only with the returns, but with the company and a comments and the obvious opportunity to learn and learn and learn some more. It all helps the mental and emotional discipline of the trading too. So thanks again.

- Roro, January 11, 2012  


Way to go Phil! Have I said how much I appreciate your site lately! Your ability to teach and your willingless to give others a forum to demonstrate their own skill sets makes your site remarkable. I got great help from you, jmm1951, and Iflantheman (special thanks!) today. Hell, if I have many more days like this I may even be able to sign up for a full year rather than doing it just quarterly. Tomorrow is another day but, fabulous job today!

- dclark41, January 25, 2012  


Phil- I would like to echo the sentiments of dclark41. Joining this site was the best thing I have ever done to aid my growth as a trader/investor. There are so many smart and experienced people here sharing their ideas that regardless what your investing style is you will learn something daily. Thank you and all the regular contributors for your generosity.

- Acd54, January 25, 2012  


Maya, After years of being pretty good at picking stocks I still managed to lose almost as much as I made.All the reading Phil asked us to do as a new member (And everything else I can get my hands on lately) has revealed my Achilles Heal.Good stock picks do not necessarily make money. My problem was swinging for the fences. Since becoming a member Jan 1 this year and getting into to scaling into small trades I am amazed at the steady profit growth I have experienced already while not worrying about getting killed. And having fun doing it.. Phil, Thanks for the education, the help you give and the chance to learn more and get better. Also thanks to all the members who have answered the few questions I had when your not around.

- Ricpar, February 2, 2012  


You are doing a fantastic job. I think most of us our very well balanced and consequently have learned how to manage through these ever so short declines in the market without panic.

- Dclark41, April 5, 2012  


- Ricpar, February 2, 2012  


Phil has some great insight into the market. He's given me a different perspective on the market and I know I'm a better trader/investor because of it. I've been trading options since the late 80's and Phil is right. Unless you know what is going to happen (how can you, unless you have insider information), then do what the smart money does - be the house. Remember guys, we're allowed to sell options. If you're afraid to be short, then do a spread to limit your liability. When I think about the money I've made and lost on options, a good approximation is that I win 30% of the time when I do a straight buy; I win about 70% of the time when I do a spread; I win nearly 90% of the time when I sell naked.

- Autolander, April 11, 2012  


I've been trading/investing since the early 80's (my dad started me out young). I've had seven figure accounts (in the past) and I've done lots of trading, so I can say that I'm a well seasoned investor. Phil is the real deal. His trades make sense and his strategy is sound. He sees things that others miss and he's one of the best at finding price anomalies. When he makes a mistake, he has an exit strategy already planned. He hedges very well and he has an instinct which tells him to go to cash or to be all in.

- Autolander, April 13, 2012