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Friday, April 19, 2024

Telling Tuesday Morning

We should get a better read on the markets today.

I like what I'm seeing in Asia and Europe and I'm very pleased with my new chart, which will give us a nice quick visual of just how we are doing as far as hitting our various goals.

I also like what I'm seeing over in Asia as the Nikkei made a very quick u-turn from yesterday's drop, retracing 2/3 of its loss with a strong finish.  While the Nikkei still looks weak in the longer-term view, the Hang Seng is on fire in the last 4 sessions, up 500 points and retaking the critical 20,000 level.  In 2004, the Hang Seng was at 12,000 and the Dow was at 10,000 – to say we have lost some ground would be quite the understatement!

Even if you allow for the fact that the dollar has dropped close to 40% in value over that time, that still only accounts for 4,800 points of the gain, to 16,800 still leaving the Hang Seng outpacing the Dow by 2:1 over the past 3 years.  As I've said before – if they have room to grow then we have a lot of room to catch up.

We used to be able to bet Asia to do whatever the US markets did the day before but I think the global tables have turned and the US markets are starting to slavishly follow the lead of Asia and Europe, acting as the lagging indicator of global sentiment.  Whether this has been caused by the removal of spines from Wall Street traders (who have mainly been replaced by machines this year anyway) or whether it's just US finally taking the back seat in the global economy it's too early to say – but it certainly bears watching!

Asia did get a boost from a trade deal we finally worked out with South Korea but it's China that is bailing us out this week by promising to go on a $12.5Bn shopping spree, the result of Hank Paulson's recent negotiations/begging for mercy trip in December.  They did this last year when Vice Premier Wu Yi made a similar shopping trip and dropped $16Bn as she toured the country.  Anyone who's been to Las Vegas knows how fast Asian women can spend $16Bn while their husbands gamble.  Although this year's reduced amount is a mild rebuke to our sanctions against Chinese glossy paper, the fact that China chose to tell us the trip is still on will be quite a relief to US exporters.  So thank you Ms. Wu and congrats to Secretary Paulson for pulling this one out of a hat!

Speaking of Chinese shoppers, retail sales in Hong Kong rose a whopping 28%, mainly due to the shift in their big Lunar New Year week from January to February 7 but January only had a 1.5% decline so the net gain is a very impressive 11% for those 2 months. 

Europe is up across the board this morning as some progress seems to be being made with Iran (now that all the sailors have "confessed").  This leaves the EU free to focus on poor AAPL, as they probe ITunes in an antitrust investigation into their music-pricing structure which is, by nature, achieved by colluding with the various music companies (there's only 4).

 

"Jonathan Todd, a European Commission spokesman, confirmed that regulators sent their objections Friday to the record companies and Apple. He said European Union regulators are focusing on the sales agreements between Apple and the record companies, alleging they are anticompetitive and hurt consumers."  The Brussels-based authority said Apple and the record companies have two months to defend themselves in writing and can request an oral hearing.  After that, if the regulator finds evidence of an antitrust violation, it can fine the companies up to 10% of their annual global revenue.  Ouch!

The futures look bright in the US markets (7:30) and I see no reason at the moment why they shouldn't hold up.  While we are certainly not out of the woods yet, I think there may be a little bit of light shining through the trees as our indexes retake some critical levels:

 

 

Day's

Break

38%

50

Break

Index

Current

Move

Down

Fib Level

DMA

Up

Dow 12,348 27.95 12,350 12,369 12,450 12,500
Transports 2,750 9.54 2,736 2,830 2,812 2,983
S&P 1,422 3.69 1,410 1,407 1,425 1,440
NYSE 9,279 43.73 9,100 9,073 9,220 9,400
Nasdaq 2,417 0.62 2,400 2,411 2,438 2,450
SOX 464 -0.12 470 469 469 490
Russell 798 2.51 790 786 798 810
Hang Seng 20,002 193 19,400 19,789 19,969 19,800
Nikkei 17,244 215 17,000 17,244 17,412 17,600
BSE (India) 12,619 163 12,900 13,253 13,557 13,600
DAX 6,998 60 6,700 6,707 6,797 6,900
CAC 40 5,676 31 5,500 5,495 5,590 5,700
FTSE 6,342 26 6,200 6,205 6,276 6,350

 

I hope you like the new chart.  Let's call this 27 green, 20 red and 5 neutral (within .25%).  Clearly we have NYSE leadership but I'm disturbed by the Russell, who was the co-leader of the fall rally.   The transports need to lead today's turnaround as they are probably going to be losing the excuse of runaway oil pricing keeping them down.  The SOX have a very easy path to green, needing just 6 points to change 3 boxes so we'll be flipping out of our IGW puts and grabbing the $60s for $1.35 as a momentum play this morning, to offset some of our other puts which we will hopefully be able to let go of once we clear our comfort zones.

With Iran actually using the word "diplomatic" in yesterday's exchange with Britain, the poor oil traders may find themselves holding the barrel as the world once again fails to come to an end.  Disappointing as this must be for them, I'm sure they can take solace in the fact that a return to normalcy should provide a nice boost for miners as copper and steel can resume their upward march with major global construction projects moving forward at a record pace.

We are a long way from comfortable at $66 a barrel but let's hope we can get below $65 and hope for a nice inventory build to give oil a push down to the lower $60s for the week.

ZMan and I have a long list of oil companies we'd like to short in addition to our "LVS-in-waiting" (our term for a massively overbought security about to crash), TSO who have REALLY overstayed their welcome above $100.  We are already in on the $100 puts with a $1.80 basis but the $95 puts are going to start looking attractive again at just $1as a momentum play.  It's a tricky day to play it with inventory coming out tomorrow but fortune is likely to favor the bold in this case and we are well protected to the upside with our COP and XOM covers.

We need oil below $65 otherwise we're better off waiting until the afternoon run-up but here are the plays we will have our eye on:

We should be able to give up on our COP $70s this morning and take a shot at the May $65 puts for $1.15 – this gives us time to be wrong and a good shot at being able to sell the Apr $65 puts against for a possibly even play to help us stay in for the long haul.

HES has also taken a nasty turn and the May $55s seem reasonable at $1.65MRO jumped $1.63 yesterday, bringing the cost of the May $95 puts down to $1.80, near their 2-week low but far below their $3 high.  MUR $55 puts make a nice momentum play at $1.90 ($1.75, .25 T stop), T. Boone's SU is likely to be miserable if oil gets below $64 and the current $75 puts are just $1 for a fun play.  SLB may have gotten ahead of themselves back at $70 and we like the $70 puts for $1.40 ($1.25, .25 T stop) and Z likes SJT if nat. gas breaks back below $7 with the May $30 puts looking very reasonable at .50.

If the coal stocks start falling (ACI, BTU, CNX, MEE, FDG) then we can feel fairly safe that we are in a real downturn.  We can expect the usual afternoon shenanigans so let's follow our day trading rules closely on these as well as the VRule before rushing out and overdoing it.  The energy group may hold up in a general bull run but my main scenario for a sustainable rally is some rotation out of this sector and back to tech – it might happen but I won't hold my breath!

Gas traders will hang their hats on a Colorado University hurricane forecast due at 10 am so let's be ready for that, hopefully ZMan will be able to give us the inside scoop in today's comments.

Let's keep an eye on gold, which was telling us all last week that the Iran crisis wouldn't last (and we solved that one last Wednesday anyway) but it will also tell us that the dollar may be down but not out at the 83 level.  $660 is gold's 50 dma and crossing below that is going to leave a lot metal traders holding the purse.  They tested it briefly yesterday but we'll see how today's action plays out.

=========================================================

GOOG should get a nice boost today as they unveil their plan to sell TV ads through DISH using their online auction system.  The key to this system is Google's plan to give advertisers great feedback like how many TV set-top boxes were tuned in to each commercial they ran, and charge based only on the number of set-top boxes where the commercial played. It additionally will provide advertisers data about whether users changed the channel during the commercial.  We will, of course take out our $470 callers this morning!

It seems to me that Google certainly has nothing to fear from YHOO as they currently display June news at http://biz.yahoo.com/ .   Seriously, if they can't get it together to give investors current information on one of their main links, how can they ever mount a serious campaign to unseat Google?  I also stopped using their option screens last week as they were missing months of data ALL week without fixing it – someone is really asleep at the wheel over at Yahoo and neither AOL or MSN offer a credible threat to Google's Global dominance, so why is this stock at $458?

I'm putting my foot down and taking another round of June $490s ahead of earnings (now $9.60) and I'm also going to grab the May $520s for $1.65 as a nice momentum play which we can hold if they make it to $470 this week.  We'll take a put on the turn but right now I'm expecting to see $465 today so we'll see how it runs.

There's a nice business opportunity here for an advertising house to mass produce low-cost commercials as this will bring many new small-business advertisers to the market if successful.

We still have plenty of May and June calls that make nice DD candidates on a good market move.  I'm very pro-FDX today and, of course, MSFT makes a very attractive target, along with TXN, WFR, DELL, YRCW, INTC, ICE, MRVL, AXP…  Let's just say I'm very glad we have cash today!

Hopefully the market holds up, lots of action today, so stay tuned in comments as we should be very busy today if this rally manages to take hold.

A good pre-market move is to set 20% (of profit) stops on the calls we sold against our LTP plays, no reason to give that back and we can always resell them! 

We do not want to get too excited though, let's make sure these moves are real and coming with volume confirmation and scale into our positions – if it's a real rally, we still have 400 points to go before we retest our highs, plenty of time to get in.

Let's have some fun today,

– Phil

 

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