Saturday, April 27, 2019

/ES continues its non-cooperation ... a couple of earnings losses illustrate a nuance

The S&P futures continued to be a drag for anybody short:

I continue to sell puts and wait for a pullback. *sigh*

I had a mixed week trading earnings, with one too-big loss, MMM:

I sold a 5-wide Iron Condor for 28 cents ... and had to buy it back the next day for $3.50. This was for 5 contracts, so that's a $1610 loss. Ouch!

I sold only 4 different underlyings that day:

EW
TXN
FB
MMM

... so taking $2000 in risk in MMM was too much, clearly.

There are at least 11 good ones available on Monday so I'm going to revise my strategy to going down to take the minimal risk I can in each and only then possibly scale up in a couple of the most volatile (and therefore lucrative) when I get that done.

3 of the earnings for next week ... more then!





Friday, April 19, 2019

Earnings season continues; leaving money on the table ... /ES futures update

Earnings season went into overdrive this week ... unfortunately I left money on the table on Monday:

First, one good thing happened early Monday:


I sold 4 Iron Condors on Friday and they were down 50% by Monday and closed out for a $100 profit (on about $900 of risk). I wish I'd sold 40 of them!

I made only one earnings trade: JNJ (a small winner) and then got distracted and left several other possible ones without pulling the trigger.

Two losers on Tuesday, CSX and BK ... both small losses (just under $100 and just over $100), fortunately. The 8 other earnings plays I did this week all won.

This was also the week we get to do the Fabulous NDX trade, which I sold for $559 (a one-lot) ... and on this one you get to keep all of it (minus a smidgen of commissions) when it expires worthless the next morning ... which happened as expected this time on Thursday a.m., since the Friday market was closed for Good Friday.

As far as the /ES, it's been zooming back and forth:


If it will just keep from zooming up I can continue to sell puts ... like the $925 batch (of two) I sold on Wednesday, expiring Friday the 26th ...

More next week ...





Saturday, April 13, 2019

Opening of spring "earnings season" inauspicious .. short /ES painful, short LYFT just fine!

Three banks had earnings on Friday ... two won and one lost (JPM):

So after 3 earnings trades this "season" we're down a few dollars ... JPM lost more than the other two together won ..

I did dodge one bullet and made one smart trade, I think:

Since the /ES futures had been bouncing off 2900 and going back down every time they touched it, I thought, hey, a 2905/2910 short call spread! Why not? I didn't, though, and on Friday:

I am continuing to sell puts against my short /ES position, but this just gets it further away, darn it ...

But my best trade of the week concerns ride-sharing company Lyft ... I can't find the reference where this was mentioned, but I heard on Tastytrade, I think, that they've so far lost $17 for every ride they've given.

And their IPO has been less than stellar:


So I sold the 69/74 call spread expiring May 3 and should get 1/2 the credit on this on by April 22 or so ...

Earnings season takes off next week, with some big ones:



More next week!

Friday, April 5, 2019

I took a week off ... short /ES not working yet; undefined risk vs defined: 2 tests

I didn't post last week as I traded only 1 earnings trade, the ill-fated Walgreens-Boots Alliance (WBA):
There have been only two losing earnings trades the past couple of weeks, WBA and CCL:

Both were short strangles: undefined risk trades. Let's see how they actually performed vs a theoretically defined risk alternative.

First, CCL. This was a textbook case. It just broke barely through the short strike early a.m. after earnings, and I was able to close it at the suggested max loss: 2x the credit received, almost exactly. This is right at $50/contract loss.

WBA was much worse ... I didn't get to this one until it was priced $2.91, way above the same sort of max loss I'd have been shooting for ... I got almost the same credit, 25 cents for this one. So that $241 per contract loss.

Let's see what each of these would have been if traded as defined risk trades.

I've typically been using $5 wide strikes, so max loss would be $500 less the credit received. For a 25 cent credit, that's $475 max loss per contract. That's clearly much worse than either of the undefined risk losses shown here .... I'm not positive that this is representative of the typical, but it's compelling enough that I'm going to stick with this for most low-priced underlying and a few a bit more expensive too.

The not yet working trades I put on this past week: short /ES futures. I thought that when the /ES hit 2880 that wouldn't go much higher ... and then the jobs report came out happy and:

Darn it! But: I am selling puts against the short /ES positions, at the rate of around $375 per week per contract, so: it can't go up too much from here (can it?) and I'll be "reducing basis" every week in pursuit of profitability on this one.

More next week ...