How To Turn Stock Market Mayhem To Your Advantage In March
Update: 2018-03-20
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Michael: Hello everybody. This is Michael Gross of OptionSellers.com here with head trader James Cordier. We’re here with your March OptionSellers.com video podcast. James, as we head in to March here, what’s on everyone’s mind is the obviously the big development we had here in February. Big stock sell-off, it’s on everyone’s mind right now… stock investors are busy brushing themselves off, wondering what’s next. Over here in commodities, we didn’t really see a lot of movement in the markets themselves, but we had some developments in the option and option volatility. Why don’t we start off this month by maybe just talking a little bit about what happened in stocks themselves.
James: Michael, it’s interesting, a couple of years ago we had BREXIT. We had Switzerland leaving the European Union, we also had the election outcome a year and a half ago. All these events didn’t really change fundamentals on a long-term basis, but what they did do is they injected a lot of volatility. The 3,000 point drop in the Dow Jones here just a couple weeks ago did exactly that. It turns out that there’s something called the volatility index in stocks. There was an instrument that was built for people to go short or long on it. It seems as though everyone was way short volatility. In the stock market, that got unwound, it developed a 3,000 point drop in the Dow Jones, and now we’ve got to the stock market recouping quite well. It’s probably going to continue to rally everything as far as we can tell. The U.S. economy looks good, the global economy looks good, stock profits look excellent right now. Volatility spiked in a dramatic way. For ourselves selling options on commodities, we saw volatility index spike as well. Precious metals, energies, and some of the foods did have a spike. In many cases, a lot of the positions we had did increase in value during this large increase in volatility. It’s not always fun when this happens, but it is absolutely a key ingredient in option selling. It allows us to sell options, as you know, 40-50% out-of-the-money. Without that creation that happens every 6-12 months in the volatility index in commodities and in stocks, we wouldn’t be able to do what we do. It’s a key ingredient and it did happen this past month. We’re very excited about the opportunities that it has now in selling options.
Michael: It was kind of ironic, James, because you and I were watching this unfold, we were watching the stock market take a nose-dive, and we’re watching our commodities boards and basically nothing is going on. We have gold and silver prices staying silver, the grains and foods were business as usual, crude took a little bit of a sell-off, tied into stocks, but that was really the only one. Over in natural we had to sell off, but that was really already under way. It didn’t have much to do with stocks. Yet, you saw option volatility spill over from that stocks and it increased the value of those options temporarily, but now you’re seeing that come off a little bit. Is that right?
James: It is. The volatility index in the stock market is practically to the same level as it was prior to the 3,000 point sell-off. In commodities, it has now come back about 75% of the level that it was at. The fundamentals never really changed at all, especially in commodities, and I think it sets up a great landscape for doing what we do. We’ll find out relatively soon.
Michael: You know, a lot of people, they want to get diversified from stocks. That’s one reason why they’re interested in selling commodities options in the first place. You know, it was interesting… on CNBC they had an article about on the biggest day down in the Dow it was down, what…1,075 points or something like that? They ran an article that there was only 7 stocks higher that day and 2 of them were cereal and tobacco. It was Kellogg and one of the tobacco companies- I forget which one. CNBC’s analysis of that was, “well, even when stocks are down, people will still eat and they’ll still smoke”. That’s a point we make constantly is that no matter what’s going on, people still need to eat, they still need to drink coffee, and they still need to put gas in their tanks.
James: The breakaway from the correlation from the stock market was very evident on that day. Gasoline and crude oil and soybeans and coffee… business as usual. That’s why a lot of our clients like being diversified away from the stock market. On that occasion, we did see the volatility index increase options on commodities, as well, and that’s just a key ingredient for us doing the business that we do. They did increase while we were in them. We just see, going forward, just a great opportunity to use that additional premium to position clients.
Michael: So, we got a little bit of a surge in volatility, that pushed premiums up, and now that’s coming off. The premium is coming back down a little bit, but now we’ll have that historical volatility in the market. One thing you and I have talked about is now that opens up opportunities for us to do some strategies that maybe we weren’t able to do before.
James: Right. In 2017, we saw volatility come down steadily the entire year, which really produced a great return for a lot of option sellers last year. Chapter 10 in the Third Edition of our book, we talk extensively about credit spreads. We haven’t had the opportunity to do that the last year or two because volatility has been low. The influx of volatility that happened over the last 30 days now allows us to do this. It is probably the most safe, sound option strategy there is. With the additional premium now, we’re looking forward to positioning in that fashion the next 6 months or so.
Michael: Okay. One observation we were making as well is when volatility is up in options, obviously that’s when we want to sell them, but when the volatility is higher there can actually be less risk in selling the options because you’ve already had that surge in volatility. So, often times the path of least resistance is to come back off that volatility after you sold them.
James: We saw that the months after the BREXIT, we saw that months after the Trump win during the election of 2016, and, boy, we did quite well right after that period. We expect that to happen again this year. We’ll see if that’s how it plays out.
Michael: All right. As we head into March, we’re going to show you a couple ways maybe you can do just that. We’re going to move on to our feature markets segment and we will cover that in just a couple minutes. Thank you.
Michael: All right. So, we’re back with our markets segment this month. The first market we’re going to talk about this month is the natural gas market, a market that’s near and dear to our hearts. Natural gas, if you’re unfamiliar with commodities, it’s a great market for selling options. There’s a ton of liquidity there and also you can sell options very far out-of-the-money, so it’s one of the core markets you want to focus on if you’re building an option selling portfolio. One of the first fundamentals that we look at when we look at markets like natural gas is going to be the seasonal tendency. As we know, seasonal tendency charts are not guaranteed by any means, but they do give you an average of what prices have tended to do in past years at different times of year. What we find is there are underlying fundamentals that tend to drive these every year. We’re going to take a look at the ones in natural gas right now. James, do you want to talk about that and why we see this type of movement in gas prices often in the past?
James: It’s interesting, Michael. Often, suppliers want to bulk up for seasonal demand in winter, and everyone is basically building supplies going into December, January, and February. If the winter, especially in the Northeast, falls just a little bit shy of expectations or it’s 5 degrees cooler or warmer than normal, the supply actually is more than ample and prices usually start coming down in January and February as we see that we’re going to have enough natural gas and we’re not going to be running out. Again, here in the United States, we’ve had an extremely mild winter. Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, it has been some 10-15 degrees warmer this year than normal, and prices have come down just like seasonally they do. Supplies of natural gas this year are surprisingly low. Right now, we are approximately 23% below the supply of last year. We’re 19% below the 5-year average. That is because we’ve been exporting natural gas, something brand new to the exporting ability right now here in the United States. It’s setting up really nicely for the seasonal rally that we’re expecting. Natural gas right now is near it’s 12-month low here as we end February, often where it is this time of the year. Seasonally, what then happens is suppliers start building supplies then for summer cooling needs, which is like May, June, and July, and that often will give us a price spike starting in March and April.
Michael: So, what you’re saying is this is really a factor of distributors accumulating that inventory, driving demand at that wholesale level, which is really what’s pulling prices higher… at least it has in the past.
James: Exactly right. If we get through the winter, and it looks like we are again this year, prices usually come down because we are more than well supplied this time of the year. What wholesalers do for summer demand for cooling needs, especially in the Northeast, is they start building supplies and that demand boosts the prices starting in March, April, and May, and it’s setting up quite well to do that again this year.
Michael: You know, it’s interesting, James, we talked about stock prices coming down earlier and a lot of people noticed a correlation and said, “oh, natural gas prices came down with stock.” Tha
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