Monday, September 7, 2009

Labor Day Options View

Market Beating Foresight: Is Sentiment Changing

The stock market lost ground last week as the S&P dropped -1.2%. The week started with declines, but did recover some of those losses by the end of the week. Economic data was mixed as the Manufacturing Indexes showed improvement along with pending home sales. Payroll data was released on Friday and those numbers too were better than expected. But the market seemed spooked by an unemployment rate that rose more than expected. We sense that market sentiment is becoming more pessimistic with traders selling good news while bad news carrys more weight than it did just a few short weeks ago. September is traditionally the worst performing month and that too may be adding to the caution. The economy is still in declining although the pace of the declines has decreased. The worst may be over, but it will take time before consumer confidence returns and that is an essential ingredient for economic growth. We expect the unemployment rate to continue rising into next year, and those job losses will dampen any recovery. All signs still suggest that the recovery will be slow and could take several years as consumers regain confidence, rebuild wealth and reduce debt loads. Over the short term we expect the market to remain very bumpy, in range bound trading. We can make money in such a market by taking gains more quickly and turning over stocks more frequently. If volatility stays low, we know our trading strategy will exploit current market conditions, allowing expansion of our performance lead over competitors, as well as the broad market index.

Options Portfolio: Whopping 254% Gain Since January 2007

Our Options Portfolio is now up a whopping 254% just since January 2007. It is returns like those that make the additional risk worth while. We expect the market to end the year slighly higher. Not a great market for buying call options, but one for selective buying. We do plan to increase our allocations in call options but will do that slowly and selectively as the market shows continued improvement.

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