Entries from December 2009 ↓
December 29th, 2009 — MSM Newsletter
We’re back after a refreshing one-week break! Here in Denver we packed the house with visitors, the kitchen with delicacies, the slopes with our skis, and our bellies with generally excessive consumption. Good thing reality returns with a bite soon!
Remember that Redford flick from the 1970s, Three Days of the Condor? It’s a thriller about high-level conspiracy. In volatility trading, an Iron Condor is not conspiratorial, just an income trade. You sell two puts and buy two calls, with the spread between both always giving you an initial credit in your account (your highest possible return). If the underlying issue, say an individual stock or the S&P 500 Index, the SPX, trades between your puts and calls, your options expire and you keep one or both credit spreads. It’s a popular thing to do in sideways markets.
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December 15th, 2009 — MSM Newsletter
Tis the season for expirations, the keyhole onto institutional risk-management. The shuffle started Friday Dec 11, when risk-management trading dominated. You won’t see it in price or volume, or puts or calls, but in the nature of execution.
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December 8th, 2009 — MSM Newsletter
Denver is an icebox, so we went east to New York to warm up. Lovely here, the tree glittering at Rockefeller Center and the snowflakes magically materializing to music on the Saks & Co. façade. Festive!
Carmen Barone and the Barclays team graciously hosted me yesterday on the NYSE trading floor, and in the afternoon Marge Wywras at Knight Capital Group turned me loose with the traders on the Knight floor in Jersey City. That’s darned near a perfect business day to me. Continue reading →
December 1st, 2009 — MSM Newsletter
I’m moderating the NIRI Virtual Chapter meeting on modern equity markets tomorrow 12/1 at noon ET. See nirivirtual.org for details.
As I move the midsection flab from a grand Thanksgiving holiday aside to get at the keyboard (a little humor there), the US equity markets are closing up again. IR folks and executives, what’s proving the most accurate indicator of market direction lately? And what’s it mean to your own market structure?
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