Those who followed my advice to buy the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) July, 2014 $23 puts at $1.68 yesterday are now in the enviable position of owning a security that is running away to the upside.
At this morning?s high the puts traded at $2.40, a one day gain of an eye popping 43%. I am getting emails from a lucky few that they got in as low as $1.55 after receiving my Trade Alert.
The question is now what to do about it.
I just called friends around the country, and it appears that a warming trend is in place that could last all the away into mid February. It is starting in Florida and Texas and gradually working its away north, although they are still expecting eight inches of snow in Chicago this weekend.
Mad Day Trader Jim Parker is confirming as much with his proprietary trading model chart, which I have included below. He says that we put in an excellent medium term high in the UNG on Thursday at $27. This morning we tested daily support at $23.26 and it held the first time.
But with warmer weather, this is almost certain to break on a future downside push. Then we train out sites on the 18-day moving average at $22.25. After that, $22.07 is in the cards, the top of the gap that we broke through only as recently as January 27, only four days ago.
There, our United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) July, 2014 $23 puts, with a present delta of 40% (forget this if you don?t speak Greek), should be worth $2.83. You might get more, if implied volatilities for the puts rise on the downside, which they almost always do.
That would be a one-day profit of 68%, adding $3,000 to the value of our notional $100,000 model trading portfolio, or 3% to our performance this year, which I would be inclined to take.
Now it is time to get clever. It would be wise to enter a limit day order to sell your $23 puts right now at the $2.68 price. Since the first visit to these lower numbers usually happens on a big downside spike, the result of stop loss dumping of panic longs accumulated by clueless short term traders this week, you might get lucky and get filled on the first run. If you don?t, keep reentering the limit order every day until it does get done, or until we change our strategy.
This has been one of my best trades in years, and it appears that a lot of followers managed to successfully grab the tiger by the tail.
If there was ever a time to upgrade to Jim Parker?s Mad Day Trader service, it is now. He will see the breakdowns and the reversals with his models faster than I, and get his Trade Alerts out quicker. Why wait for the middleman, who is me? These fast, technically driven markets are where Jim really earns his pay.
If you want to get a pro rata upgrade from your existing newsletter or Global Trading Dispatch subscription to Mad Hedge Fund Trader PRO, which includes Mad Day Trader, just email Nancy in customer support at nmilne@madhedgefundtrader.com.
Do it quick because she is about to get overwhelmed.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Natural-gas.jpg300400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-02-03 01:05:422014-02-03 01:05:42Now We?re Cooking With Gas (UNG)
I received a crackly, hard to understand call late last night from one of my old natural gas buddies in the Barnet shale in Texas. Chances are that CH4 peaked in price last night with the expiration of the front month contract. It was time to sell.
I spent five years driving a beat up pick up truck on the tortuous, jarring, washboard roads of this forlorn part of the country, buying up mineral rights from old depleted fields for pennies on the dollar.
The sellers thought I was some moron hippie from California, probably high on some illegal drugs. "You want to redrill these fields and throw dynamite down the holes?" It was a crazy idea. Since I was offering hard cash, they couldn't sign the dotted line fast enough.
During the late nineties nobody had ever heard of fracking. Even in the oil industry only a few specialists were aware of it. My old buddy, Boone Pickens, claims he was doing it in the fifties, but then nothing the wily oilman ever does surprises me.
Only a few reckless independent wildcatters were experimenting with the new process. The oil majors wouldn't touch it with a ten-foot pole. It was unproven, dangerous, and could never deliver sufficient volumes to get them interested. With the deep pockets a trial lawyer could only dream about, they couldn't afford the liability risk of polluting a town's drinking water. So it was left to small fry like me to finance this ground-breaking technology.
I ended up developing a couple of fields, riding gas up from $2 to $5 MMBTU, then selling them off to the gas companies. My partners and I made a fortune.
We have remained in touch over the years. Whenever something indecipherable happens in the international capital markets, they call me for an explanation. When something special sets up in the natural gas market, I get the first call.
On Election Day we all go out and get drunk because their conservative vote cancels out my liberal ones, so why bother? We do this at Billy Bob's in Fort Worth, a favorite of former President George W. Bush, where the 24-ounce chicken fried steaks fall over both sides of your plate.
I didn't reenter the gas market until the Amaranth hedge fund blow up took the price up to $17 in 2006, and then down like a stone. I figured out that the United States Natural Gas Fund (ETF) suffered from a peculiar mathematics that was death for long side investors.
The natural gas futures market often trades in a contango. This is when front month contracts trade at a big premium to far month ones, adjusted for the cost of borrowed money. This premium completely disappears at expiration, when the commercial buyers, like electric power plants and chemical companies, take physical delivery of the gas.
What (UNG) does is buy contracts three months out, run them into expiration, and then roll the money into new contracts another three months out. The premium they pay rapidly falls to zero. Then they repeat the process all over again. It is a perfect wealth destruction machine.
The same dilemma besets futures contracts for oil (USO), corn (CORN), wheat (WEAT), and soybeans (SOYB) to a lesser degree, and a lot of traders make their livings from these anomalies.
What (UNG) does is buy contracts three months out, run them into expiration, and then roll the money into new contracts another three months out. The premium they pay rapidly falls to zero. Then they repeat the process all over again. It is a perfect wealth destruction machine.
I have seen a period when natural gas rose 40%, but the (UNG) dove 40%, thanks to the costly effects of the contango. Needless to say, this makes the (UNG) the world's greatest short vehicle in a falling market. It is a fantastic heads I will, tails you lose security.
There is another crucial factor making natural gas such a great natural short that few outside the industry are aware of. You cannot store natural gas to the degree you can semi liquid oil. Unlike Texas tea, natural gas wells can't be capped without damaging their long-term production. It has to flow and be sold at whatever price you can get. If you don't, it goes away. This means that when the price of natural gas falls, it does so with a turbocharger, also making it an ideal short play.
To make a long story short, I made another fortune riding gas down from $17 to $2. I haven't touched it for 2 years. Other hedge fund manager friends of mine made billions on this trade, and then retired to a sedentary life of philanthropy.
At this point, natural gas is up an unbelievable 56% in three months, thanks to Mother Nature's brutal assault on most of the country, except here in balmy California. Demand is at an all time high, prices a 5-year peak, and speculative long positions in the futures market at an eight-year apex. Storage was taken down to a six month low of 1.2 trillion cubic feet with today's 230 billion cubic foot draw down.
Expiration of the front month contract triggered a super spike in the (United States Natural Gas Fund to an astounding $27, while underling natural gas made it all the way up to $5.50, nearly triple the subterranean $1.90 low set in April, 2012.
This is happening in the face of one of the greatest supply onslaughts in history that will hit the market throughout the rest of this year. They're still hiring and drilling like crazy in North Dakota.
The demand spike came hard and so fast that it caught many suppliers by surprise. That has created a bubble in the pipeline, a temporary shortfall in supplies, and triggered an incredible short squeeze in the natural gas market.
Winter can't last forever. Eventually summer comes, and the shortage of natural gas pipeline will get more than made up by thousands of new fracking wells in the US.
If the UNG returns to the November, 2013 $17 low by July 18, the value of the (UNG) July, 2014 $23 put rises from our $1.68 cost to $4.72, a potential gain of 181%. That's a fabulous risk/reward ratio, and we have six months to see it happen.
Keep in mind that liquidity could be an issue here. Yesterday, 1,549 contracts traded against on open interest of 2,297 contracts. The option market spreads here are also humongously wide and the volatility is of biblical proportions, which is endemic to the natural gas market.
Just to get a second opinion, I called Mad Day Trader Jim Parker, as I hadn't been in this market for a while. He said it was warming up in Chicago, and he was venturing outside for a walk for the first time in three days. Out went the Trade Alert!
Below please find a chart for natural gas generated by Jim?s proprietary trading model. The bottom line here is that there is a high probability that we will drop from the current $5.17 down to $4.70, break that, go down to $4.17, break that, and possibly go as low at the November low of $3.40.
They don?t call this market the ?widow maker? for nothing, so expect a lot of heart wrenching volatility before you see a substantial payoff. So it best to enter a spread of small limit orders and hope for the best.
You can best play the short side through the futures market in natural gas. For those without a futures account, you can buy the 2X ProShares Ultra Short DJ-UBS Natural Gas inverse ETF (KOLD) or the 3x Direxion Daily Natural Gas Related Bear 3X Shares inverse ETF (GASX). The more adventurous can sell short the (UNG) outright, if they can find stock to borrow.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Billy-Bobs.jpg295392Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-01-31 01:04:142014-01-31 01:04:14Time to Sell Natural Gas
Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Global Strategy Luncheons, which I will be conducting around the world throughout 2014. Please find the schedule for the next six months below.
To warm you up, I?ll email you a PowerPoint presentation covering the broad range of topics we may cover, which is pretty much everything on the planet.? An excellent meal will be followed by a wide-ranging discussion and a prolonged question and answer period.
I?ll be giving you my up to date view on stocks, bonds, currencies commodities, precious metals, and real estate. I also hope to provide some insight into America?s opaque and confusing political system. And to keep you in suspense, I?ll be throwing a few surprises out there too.
The cost is modest. My goal is to meet the readers in person, find ways to improve my products, learn about new trading opportunities, and break even on the cost. If I can gain further insights on the true state of the global economy, that?s a plus too.
I?ll be arriving at 11:00 and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one on one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets. The formal lunches start at 12:00.
The events are held at downtown five star hotels and private clubs that are easily accessible, the details of which will be emailed with your purchase confirmation.
I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research. To purchase tickets for the luncheons, please go to my online store.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/2014-Luncheon-Schedule.jpg489452Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-01-31 01:03:072014-01-31 01:03:07The Mad Hedge Fund Trader 2014 Global Strategy Luncheon Schedule
Featured Trade: (SATURDAY FEBRUARY 22 BRISBANE AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCH) (PULLING THE RIPCORD ON SOFTBANK), (SFTBY),
(HAPPY BIRTHDAY IRS!),
(THE TECHNOLOGY NIGHTMARE COMING TO YOUR CITY)
The day I bought my second lot of shares in the internet giant on December 12 was the exact point where a year of upward momentum in this stock came to a juddering halt.
The shares have since been like an errant teenaged child who you keep giving the benefit of a doubt until he goes out and steals a car. That is show business.
The immediate cause for the selloff was a downgrade of Alibaba by an unnamed Chinese internet analyst, in which Softbank is a major shareholder. The imminent IPO of Alibaba was the whole reason for owning Softbank.
It doesn?t help that the global emerging market rout has sent traders into ?RISK OFF? mode, especially in China. The doubling of Turkish interest rates overnight focused a great giant spotlight on the problem.
When in doubt, sell, especially stocks with funny sounding foreign names. ?Brave new world? technology stocks, like Alibaba, have been put on hold. A full handle move up in the yen against the US dollar to a new high for the year was further fat on the fire.
But what really tipped me over to the sell side was to see the Nikkei Average up a robust 2.70% last night, but Softbank shares drop by -1.30%. If it can?t catch a bid with this tailwind, it?s time to get out of dodge, or in this case, Kabutocho.
You knew this eventually had to happen. Since June, my Trade Alerts have enjoyed an almost unbelievable success rate of 90%. My followers have earned a +41.15% return on their capital, a multiple of what the market did. It was just a matter of time before I got slapped across the face with a fresh piece of sushi. But the entire world had to conspire against me to do it.
If you do have to lose money, this is the way to do it. By owning shares instead of options I was able to limit my loss to 2.86% off the back of a 14.3% fall in the shares. The trade was part of the general deleveraging that I have been implementing with my trading book since the end of 2013. It?s far better to have leveraged gains and unleveraged losses than the reverse.
No doubt, everything I predicted about Alibaba and Softbank will come true, and vast fortunes will be made by shareholders. But for the time being, we will have to restrict ourselves to reading about it in the newspapers from the sidelines.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/SoftBank.jpg352515Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-01-30 01:05:542014-01-30 01:05:54Pulling the Ripcord on Softbank (SFTBY)
More than 51 million iPhones sold is good enough for me, 3.2 million more than they moved a year ago, and they are more expensive devices. IPads leapt from 22.9 million to 26 million, including the five high end ones I bought.
The earnings announcement wasn?t that bad, with record quarterly YOY revenues of $57.6 billion reported. Earnings per share jumped a middling 5%, from $13.81 to $14.50, partially in response to the company?s own massive buy back program. ?Gross margins came in at 37.9%, which would be gigantic if Apple were in any other industry but technology.
The dividend was nailed at $3.05 per share, setting the yield today at 2.43% annualized, a mere 30 basis points below ten-year Treasury bonds.
However, I think that traders have become so conditioned to selling on the news that the stock wasn?t going to take a dump no matter what the company said. This is why I went into the release flat on Apple this time. It?s too early in the year to lick wounds. At today?s low of $502, we were down $73 from the recent high, or 12.7%.
If you look back at the collapse after the September, 2012 $706 peak, it took two months for the shares to fall $100. For us to lose money on the Apple February, 2014 $460-$490 bull call spread, it would have to fall twice as fast as back then, and it has to do it in only 17 trading days. Sounds like a good bet to me.
We are also getting huge valuation support down here, with an ex cash multiple of 9, versus a market multiple of 16. Investors are going to hold a gun to the head of their portfolio managers to get them to average up in this neighborhood.
You also have corporate raider, green mailer, and former Manhattan neighbor of mine (activist, to be polite) Carl Icahn twittering away about how cheap the stock is, and buying another $500 million worth of shares today to cash in on the plunge. You can see him coming in every time the stock takes a run at $507. Carl was not a factor in the last melt down.
My whole theory on why Apple has disappointed continuously for the past 18 months is that the company has just gotten too big. A different sort of physics seems to apply when companies exceed $500 billion in market capitalization. The more money the company makes, the cheaper it gets. This is causing even the most seasoned value players to adopt a surly attitude, throw their handsets at their monitors, and tear out there hair, if they have any left.
Steve Jobs must be laughing from the grave.
For your edification, I have included a proprietary chart from my colleague, Mad Day Trader Jim Parker, showing huge technical support at the $470-$480 level. It is days like this that Jim is worth hit weight in gold. Too bad he isn?t heavier.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/S.APL-1-28-143.jpg496553Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-01-29 01:04:032014-01-29 01:04:03Apple Strikes Again
Featured Trade: (FRIDAY FEBRUARY 14 SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA STRATEGY LUNCH), (WHAT THE MARKETS ARE DOING FROM HERE), (SPY), (QQQ), (IWM), (FXY), (TLT), (TBT), (XLF), (XLY), (TURKEY IS ON THE MENU), ?(TUR), (TKC)
SPDR S&P 500 (SPY)
PowerShares QQQ (QQQ)
iShares Russell 2000 (IWM)
CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (FXY)
iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT)
ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT)
Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF)
Consumer Discret Select Sector SPDR (XLY)
iShares MSCI Turkey (TUR)
Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS (TKC)
For the last couple of nights, I have left my iPhone logged into the Argentina peso market, one of several troubled currencies igniting the emerging market contagion. Whenever the peso losses another handle to the US dollar, an alarm goes off. That gives me a head start on how American markets will behave the next day.
I have not been getting a lot of sleep lately. My poor phone has recently been sounding off like a winning slot machine at a Las Vegas casino.
Take a look at the long-term chart for the peso, and it?s clear that some traders have not gotten any sleep for five years, when the peso cratered 50% against the greenback. An imploding currency, soaring national debt, and sliding economy promise to send it lower.
Incompetent leadership doesn?t help either. You know that things are bad when your ships get seized by creditors when they land at foreign ports.
When I wrote my all asset class forecast for 2014, there was only one thing I knew for sure: this year would be harder than last. That has been my best prediction for 2014 so far.
The guaranteed shorts, those for the Japanese yen (FXY) and the Treasury bond market (TLT), have been rocketing to the upside since the opening bell rang on January 2. The no brainer longs, like financials (XLF) and consumer discretionaries (XLY), have been plummeting.
The heart wrenching 4.3% correction we saw for the S&P 500 (SPY), and the 5% hit for the Dow average this month, the worst weekly draw down in two years, has predictably brought the Armageddon crowd out of the closet once again. All of a sudden, a 10% correction best case, and Dow 3,000 worst case, are on the table once again. Do they have a leg to stand on?
Not really.
To achieve these big numbers on the downside, your really need a global systemic financial crisis. There isn?t one remotely on the horizon. Yes, there are difficulties in Argentina, the Ukraine, and Turkey. But they are locally confined.
Together, these countries account for less than 1% of global GDP. If they disappeared completely, they would barely make a blip in world GDP. They certainly are not important enough to panic you into emptying your ATM at the local mall on your next lunch break.
You also need excessive leverage. But that has been banned by prime brokers since the 2008 crash. An aggressive long today is 20% net long, not 200% as in the bad old days of yore. Nothing systemic there.
Sure, we aren?t getting the juice that we used to from the Federal Reserve. It is likely that they will further reduce the taper from $75 billion to $65 billion of bond buying per month at their 1:00 PM Wednesday press release.
If there were a one in a million chance that this would trigger a real market meltdown, my friend, Fed governor Janet Yellen, would run that release through the shredder as fast as you could say ?Go Bears?, sending markets flying.
Others are accusing a looming financial crisis in China as another culprit. Yes, the economic data has been soggy of late, to be sure. However, that is just the continuation of a four year old trend. You can safely forget about that one.
No country in history ever suffered a financial crisis with $4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves on hand, including over $1 trillion in US Treasury bonds close to all time highs in value. In fact many of the emerging markets said to be in trouble also boast large reserves, the product of running massive trade surpluses with a hyper consuming West for the past decade.
So if we can?t blame emerging markets or the taper for the downside, then what is causing the January swoon? You can blame it all on the hedge funds.
I have seen this time and again. Whenever too many people crowd into one end of a canoe, it rolls over. When the majority of funds have identical positions, they are guaranteed to fail. That is why we have had a looking glass market performance since the beginning of this year.
Except that this time we got a turbocharger. The peaking of concentration in the most popular trades perfectly coincided with the big New Year reallocation trade, taking prices to greater extremes. Much of the selling you are seeing down here is from latecomers who bought stock only three weeks ago and are now puking them out.
Of course, I saw all of this coming a country mile off. This is why I cut my net long from 100% 10 days ago to only 10%. It is why I am maintaining a year to date performance of +5.13%, compared to a Dow that is down -5%. It is one of my best gains relative to the index over a short period ever.
The same is true of my colleague, Mad Day Trader, Jim Parker. He is almost all in cash and is also well up on the year. He stuck his toe in the water with a small position in some calls on the (TBT) last week, but it got bit off by a shark almost immediately. So he quickly stopped out, as is his way. Of course, we have been comparing notes and sharing input throughout the selling. It appears that great minds think alike.
Jim?s proprietary in-house analysis predicts that the (SPX) will bottom out just above 1,730, the market close on the November 15 options expiration. If correct, that would give us a total start to finish correction of only 6.7%, which is in line with every other correction for the past two years. But the bottoming process could last a few weeks, and provide several more gut churning dumps. Fasten your seat belt.
When will this end? Watch for the parallel confirming cross market trends. The Treasury bond market is a big one, which appears to be peaking already, right at its 200 day moving average and the top of a six month trading range.? Announcement of the next taper could spark the selloff we need there. The Japanese yen is also important. A top here could signal a return to the carry trade and ?RISK ON?.
Since Emerging markets were the instigator of the crisis, look there as well for the first signs of a turnaround. Scrutinize the chart below, and you gain some heart.? It shows that we are a scant 70 cents from setting up a potential multiyear triple bottom at $37, and worst-case $36.
More specifically, you want to see Turkey (TUR), another instigator of this crisis, recoil from $39. Expect it to bounce hard there, as long as the world is really not ending.
Then it will be off to the races once more. I?ll be keeping my powder dry until then. Watch this space.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Gunpowder-barrel.jpg382381Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2014-01-28 09:25:562014-01-28 09:25:56What the Markets Will Do from Here
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