20 April 2011

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Whip It, Whip It Good


Risk? We don't see no stinkin' risk. The dollar was taken to the woodshed.

Corporate profits are just peachy. Let me take most of my profits tax free, keep two sets of books, and I'll show you a good time too.

AAPL crushed its numbers after the bell.



Are the Miners Underperforming the Metals?



In short, the answer is yes.  That seems to be the case to some degree.

The reasons for this are roughly as follow.

From past analysis, the mining sector seems to be roughly correlated 50 percent to the underlying metal, and 50 percent to the SP 500. Obviously this varies over time because of related factors, lags and correlations, but it is not a bad rule of thumb.

Right now the SP 500 is underperforming the metals. I am showing the SP 500 compared to gold, because silver is in such a powerful short squeeze that almost everything is underperforming it.




In addition, the correlation of the miners to the SP 500 has been a little more variable of late because of the 'risk on, risk off' sector rotations. The miners seem to be affected greatly by this.

I have noticed in the past that the miners, particularly the juniors, tend to get their biggest moves near the end of tops in legs of the metals moves, playing a sort of 'catch up.' I have not done any rigorous analysis on that lately.

But it is important to note that the reason why the metals are moving is a significant factor on the miners. If it is a risk off flight to safety, chances seem to be good that the miners will underperform. If it is more of an inflation trade, the miners may catch up in relative valuations and their leverage seems to work in one's favor.

To make things even a little more complicated, various pair trades and arbitrages come in and out of fashion amongst the speculating crowd in the hedge funds, who swing a big stick on short term pricing these days.  Long metals and short miners is a trade that temporarily distorts for example.

Someone just sent me this piece by my friend Dan Norcini and I think he makes some great points on the arb trades to which I allude above.

Again I have to caution that I have not done the kind of recent rigorous analysis on this that I have done in the past, because for my own purposes it is 'working' for me. Perhaps I shall have another look at it.

As a special note, I want to thank all the kind people who bring things to my attention by email. I cannot look at everything, and even if I may have seen it, I am always grateful, just a little less so perhaps if I have an active link to it on my site. lol.

I am busy making preparations for some special meals on the holiday and it has me on the run. Prime Rib, ham, turkey, fresh and smoked sausages, and all the sides, and even the children have been helping, learning along with the adults, with some special treats and cakes.

Try to remember the poor in these times, because many families are enduring their private hells and hardships, despite all the griping by those who imagine that the poor are lazy people living in luxury. I don't see many of them volunteering for that. If it were true, Goldman Sachs would be living in homeless shelters. People say, why doesn't God do something about this, why doesn't he help the poor and straighten these things out. Well, He did do something. He sent you.

Spring is in the air, and life is resilient. We are not in thrall to any morose doctrine, nor bound by hopeless despair. Let's remember that one of the early names for the Christians were 'the Easter people,' and hallelujah and our Father was their song. And this is our legacy, our life. Not the dried bones of those who are already dead, scuttling around in darkness, grasping for things and the lives of others, desperately trying to fill their emptiness. These are no great souls but the husks of men, destined to the trash, nameless, the leavings of Gehenna.

The tomb is empty and death is overthrown, and there is nothing for us there.

Reminder: Gold and Silver Option Expiration for May Is Next Tuesday


As a reminder, the Comex will have their gold and silver option expiration on Tuesday, April 26.

Due to a lax regulation of the markets by the CFTC, there are sometimes major price manipulation shenanigans associated with these events, and these sometimes during thinly traded periods of time.

Someone sent me this article. It makes a point about the calendar holidays which I had not noticed. Here is their follow up aricle.

Since much of the physical buying comes out of Asia, and most of the price manipulation seems to originate in London and New York, this could be interesting. Although the setup is there for a thin trade, it takes a look at the composition of the markets, and the actual details of the options and contracts held in balance to other things, in order to make any judgements.

I do know that quite a few specs are jiggy with their recent gains in silver. This makes a retracement possible if someone 'gets the ball rolling' as they say. On the other hand, I have seen fellows use option expiration to breakout metals and other instruments and beat the shorts mercilessly. It is hard to trade this sort of event reliably if one is not an insider.

I stopped trading on the Comex a few years ago, before I scaled back my general trading, out of sense of discouragement in the integrity of their markets. But it is hard to get away from it, since their trades feed into and affect so many other instruments like ETFs, etc. When one take a position in a short ETF like ZSL, for example, one is trading with the Comex by proxy I would imagine.

While I do not believe in 'hanging bankers' at all, I think some serious investigations, indictments, and prison terms for the guilty white collar criminals would do a great deal to stimulate the real economy by reining in the excessive fee-based taxes from the financial sector, and refreshing the price discovery and efficiency of the markets.

But the Obama Administration is reform adverse, especially while collecting its famous billion dollar campaign slush fund. You don't get that kind of money from the "Yes We Can" crowd. And most Republicans are unashamedly servants of the pigmen.

Here is a nice, concise analysis of the Obama Administration's policy from an interview with William K. Black:
Ryssdal: What about the argument, though, that the financial system is so fragile still, and these cases so complicated, that we can’t really tear things apart with substantive investigations and prosecutions because it will all fall apart again?

Black: Yeah, that’s an excellent point. We should leave felons in charge of our largest financial institutions as a means of achieving financial stability.

Ryssdal: See, that’s funny because I was expecting you to come back with — I don’t know, JPMorgan earned $5 billion last quarter. How shaky can they be?
I am now flat in my trading account, and am not sure about putting on trades for the holiday weekend.