As we predicted, AAPL dragged down the Nasdaq yesterday but the rest of the market did fairly well with NYSE advancers outpacing decliners on decent volume. 71 stocks made new 52-week highs vs. just 26 making new 52-week lows and, as you can see from Dave Fry's AAPL chart – even AAPL managed to find some support at $536 for the moment.
We bought back our AAPL covers, as planned, and now we are hoping (not a valid investing strategy) for a bounce – preferably before we drop back to test that $505 line. It was certainly unexpected to get such a sharp move down in a single day – AAPL lost the ENTIRE market cap of all but the top 83 of the S&P 500 companies in a single day ($35Bn), which is really amazing as just 30M $550 shares being traded ($16,500) so, even if every single one was a sale with no buyer in site – the company still lost more than twice as much market cap as the total of all the shares sold in one day.
Obviously we like AAPL down here (anything below $555) so I'm not even going to get into that one again. You can sell the 2015 $400 puts for $51 and that's a net of $349 on AAPL, which is another 35% off the current price and, if you don't like AAPL enough to take that deal – why are you even looking at the stock? On Tuesday, we shared our $25,000 Portfolio positions and one of them was SVU, where we sold the Jan $4 puts for $1.60. Yesterday we got some good news regarding an asset sale and the stock flew up to $2.90 and we'll probably take the quick profits and run because we're not loving the deal – despite the positive market reaction.
If I were going to play it – I'd say the chance of them breaking $80 is pretty slim and you can sell the Dec $77.50 calls for $1.25 against the March $77.50/80 bull call spread at .90 so you have a .35 credit and some upside protection – just in case.
LULU had pretty good earnings this morning but guidance was wanting and there is no way they'll make $77.50 now so the profit on that spread is going to be .35 plus whatever value remains in the March spread, likely another .35 for a quick double. THAT's how we play these silly markets – with some nice "hit and run" trades that make solid, quick profits while we wait for the market to finally pick a direction. Our trade idea for LULU had nothing to do with the fiscal cliff – it was simply a fundamental trade on the likely outcome of their earnings and those we can do every day – without worrying about what the next rumor out of Washington may be.
Again, that's why we're short on oil. No politics, no "death crosses" – just simple fundamentals that are likely to play out over any market conditions. If the mess over in Syria gets resolved – that will be a bonus for us, If we go over the fiscal cliff – that's fine too as oil will likely sell off. There's really no such thing as an untradeable market if you know how to be a flexible trader – it's a good time of year for us to practice that.
As we noted on Tuesday, the markets certainly have no reason to go up this week and now AAPL is forcing the dreaded "death cross" on the Nasdaq as the 50 dma threatens to cross below the 200 dma at right about the 3,000 line unless the Nasdaq can rally back over it soon – early next week at the latest. We get Non-Farm Payrolls tomorrow along with Michigan Sentiment and Consumer Sentiment but then things get interesting as we wait on the last FOMC meeting of the year next Wednesday and, of course, that Fiscal Cliff deadline comes right down to the wire.
Watch that Dollar for signs of strength. Don't forget, going over the Fiscal Cliff is strong for the Dollar as we're raising taxes and cutting spending – so the push down from a rising Dollar coinciding with a panicked market could be strong indeed – if our so-called "leaders" were to let it happen. Meanwhile, we can have lots of fund with our short-term trade ideas – just don't take these markets too seriously and you'll be fine.