Slope of Hope Blog Posts

Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.

That’s What I Said

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On Wednesday of this week, I said a number of things in my market video:

+ "Some goofy nonsense will come from {the powers that be}….to help their bullish buddies out"

+ "I could see {the Dow 30} beating its way back to 12,000; were that to happen, stand out of my way, because I am going to short everything with a ticker symbol"

+ "The VIX has skyrocketed, which is another reason I'm not jumping up and down; it has to relax; it will get down to the low 20s again"

+ "Clearly some bounce is going to happen"

Well, all of this took place. By Friday, the Dow got to 11,972; the VIX got down to 23; the powers that be definitely intervened. And I shorted the market with both hands.

It's all perfectly easy, like on Wednesday evening, to say such things. After all, the wind was blowing our way. It's quite another thing to actually do something about it when the market is rocketing higher. Putting on a brave face during such events takes a certain disposition and no small amount of faith in one's methods.

The bottom line is that what I said would take place took place, and what I said I would do, I did. We'll see next week if I look like a genius or a moron.

If God is checking the blog, I'd prefer we skip the moron part. I've done my share of that role already.

0319-spx

Sirius Questions about Hedging and Risk (by Pinsen)

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Hey Fellow Slopers,

This post might be a little basic for some of you, but since Slope has a broad range of readers, I figured this might be educational to some of them.

Yesterday, a financial professional Portfolio Armor subscriber contacted me with a question: he said he’d been unable to find optimal put option contracts to hedge his client’s position in Sirius XM Radio Inc. (SIRI). I sent the note below in response, and since it covers some basics about hedging and risk, I thought it might make an educational blog post. First, though, a quick explanation of what Portfolio Armor does:

How Portfolio Armor Works:

You enter your stock and ETF holdings, and the maximum downside risk you are willing to accept for each holding. Then, using its proprietary algorithm (which was developed by a finance Ph.D. candidate), Portfolio Armor shows you the optimal put options to buy to obtain the level of protection you want at the lowest cost.

How does Portfolio Armor differ from other options tools?

Portfolio Armor is unique in that it shows the optimal put options to buy for you to obtain the precise level of protection that you want at the lowest cost.

What about just scanning Yahoo! Finance or Morningstar to manually find puts to buy?

A very good, experienced, and savvy investor might be able to find the right number of contracts and the right strike price to protect against a certain loss level, but when taking price into account he at risk of paying too much for too little coverage.

My note to the financial professional looking to hedge his client’s SIRI position:

Please see the two attached screen prints. The screen print titled “SIRI Portfolio Armor” shows that 23% is the smallest threshold for which Portfolio Armor was able to find optimal protective put option contracts for SIRI (“threshold” refers to the maximum decline you are willing to risk in your stock or ETF).

What that means is this: if you wanted to protect against a smaller loss in SIRI today (say, a greater-than-20% loss), the cost of protection would be greater than the loss you were looking to protect against (20% of your portfolio value).

That would be like spending $1000 on collision insurance for a car with a Blue Book value of less than $1000: it wouldn’t make sense. Which is why Portfolio Armor doesn’t show any contracts when the cost of protection is greater than the threshold entered.

There are a number of factors that determine how much it costs to hedge a position with protective puts. One of them is the perceived risk of the security. The other screen print, “SIRI Altman Score” shows that SIRI currently has an Altman Z”-Score of about -4.25.

Scores below 1.1 indicate risk of bankruptcy within two years, according to the Altman Z”-Score bankruptcy model (more detail on that here). That risk may help explain why SIRI is so expensive to hedge.

Another factor that affects the cost of hedging is general volatility. Volatility spiked today (due in part, most likely, to fears related to Japan)1. In general, it’s cheaper to hedge when markets are up and volatility is low (“buying umbrellas when it’s sunny out“).

It’s also generally cheaper to buy protection on a diversified ETF (e.g., SPY, which tracks the S&P 500 Index) than to buy protection on an individual stock. An index-tracking ETF such as SPY is subject to market risk, but it’s diversification pretty much eliminates idiosyncratic risk; an individual stock, on the other hand, is subject to both market risk and idiosyncratic risk.

1I wrote this note Wednesday night, after the VIX had spiked about 20% on the day. It fell about 10% today.

Nightmare Scenario For Bears? (by Gary Tanashian)

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They had it in the bag, man.  I am pretty sure the market was topping out into a healthy correction at the least.  The big question now is, can all the dust get swept under the rug by managers working feverishly to clean up the mess and to trumpet continued economic growth?

Japan actually helps this effort, as it is a perfect excuse for the correction thus far.  Short the Yen, get Libya to magically cease military action and put Ed Yardini out there with this pablum: 

“The global economy should pass these stress tests and see continued prosperity”

Nothing is decided until the hopeful rebound takes out some important moving averages.  Don't get sucked in by the touts.  Japan needs to clear, pumping G-7 monetary managers need to clear, and markets need to settle in so we can get a read on the nature of what would have been corrections of some sort, pre-Japan.

When policy makers and their market guru mouthpieces are on the tout, they are trying to influence you; trying to make you choose one side over the other.  It is probably a good idea to let the market decide, in its technicals.  The technicals have not yet given the 'all clear'.  Not in stocks, and not in Treasury Bonds for that matter.

Bears might recall the line from Blackhawk Down:  "A hiss means it's close… a snap means they're shooting at us" (I think that was it).  The snap is the moving average cluster on the SPX for example.  If broken, it's "okay, now they're shooting at us!"

Until such time, SPX has a more solid support down lower at around 1220.

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