Jay Shartsis Jay Shartsis: Tan, Don't Burn by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, August 2, 2005 Eric Fry recounts a conversation with options pro Jay Shartsis on the possibility of a future "stock-market drop. . . of some significance." ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Buy sunscreen, not Sun Microsystems...Such is the approximate message delivered by several stock market indicators, according to options pro, Jay Shartsis. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- TAN, DON'T BURN By Eric J. Fry Buy sunscreen, not Sun Microsystems...Such is the approximate message delivered by several stock market indicators, according to options pro, Jay Shartsis. A dizzying array of troubling signs, omens and auguries are warning that the stock market is due for a drop of some significance. Net-net, August of 2005 might be a much better month to buy coconut cocktails than common stocks. "This summer," Shartsis says, "you're less likely to get burned on a beach than on Wall Street." Since late April, all the major stock market indices have staged impressive rallies, lifting the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite Index to four-year highs. Not surprisingly, therefore, most investors have rekindled their passion for common stocks. Unfortunately, whenever investors begin to love stocks too much, stocks begin to abuse the affections of their admirers, by falling. "Several gauges of investor sentiment are registering more extreme readings than they did at the market top of March 7," Shartsis notes. "The 10-day CBOE put/call ratio, the 10-day Daily Sentiment Index (from MBH Commodity Advisors) and the VIX Index of option volatilities are all showing higher levels of investor bullishness – and lower levels of fear – than they did at the market peak of March 7th. "Before the March top, for example, the VIX dropped to almost 12. That reading seemed pretty darn low at the time. But guess what, last week the VIX hit almost 10, a new all- time low!" [Ed. Note: The VIX measures the implied volatilities of various options on the S&P 500 Index. Because the VIX is based on real-time option prices, it reflects investors' consensus view of future expected stock market volatility. "During periods of financial stress, which are often accompanied by steep market declines," the CBOE Website explains, "option prices - and VIX - tend to rise. The greater the fear, the higher the VIX level. As investor fear subsides, option prices tend to decline, which in turn causes VIX to decline."] Jay Shartsis: Investor Complacency "Yeah," we replied, "the VIX has become a somewhat less reliable indicator over the last few years, hasn't it?" "Very true," said Shartsis, "but I still wouldn't ignore the message it is sending. Investor complacency is high...and that worries me." "What else is worrying you?" we asked. "Well, not that it makes any difference at all," he replied, "but Vickers reports that insiders are selling more than five shares for every one they buy, and this reading is up from a recent 3.1 sells for every 1 buy." "Presumably, the insiders know something more than nothing," we noted. "Presumably," the options pro concurred. "Or maybe they're just as stupid as the rest of the 'smart money' has been lately. I do find it interesting, however, that commercial futures traders have become heavy sellers of stock futures. This 'smart money' crowd of traders has been increasing its net short positions in Dow, S&P and NDX futures. In fact, the Commercials are holding their largest net-short position in S&P futures since late January – shortly before the market tumbled." "So who's buying?" we wondered. "Who else?" Shartsis replied, "the 'dumb money.' One of the most notorious 'dumb money' groups has become mega-bullish. The small-time option traders – those who buy or sell less than 10 contracts at a time - have been aggressively buying into the market. On only two prior occasions in the last five years - July 21, 2000 and Jan. 16, 2004 - did small- time options traders buy more call options than they did last week. On both of those two prior occasions, they soon regretted their buying binges...and they probably will again this time." "Interesting. What else troubles you?" "Well, I would interpret the declining volume in QQQQs as a bad omen." "Why's that?" we asked. "When traders are fearful," Shartsis explained, "they tend to sell-short the Nasdaq 100 Trust Series ETF (QQQQ), which tends to boost trading volume in the stock. So spikes in QQQQ volume often signal a market bottom. Conversely, when traders are highly confident, QQQQ volume diminishes. And that's what's happening right now; QQQQs are continuing to rally, even as the trading volume is sliding. I interpret this divergence as a sign of complacency, and therefore, as a warning of danger ahead."
"Okay, we will consider ourselves forewarned," we replied. "Apart from the various sentiment indicators you mentioned, are you seeing any other evidence of 'toppy' price action?" Jay Shartsis: Overbought "Sure, just take a look at the percentage of stocks above their 10-week moving averages. In only about two months, the percentage of NYSE issues trading above their 10-week moving averages has gone from 16% to a recent reading of 80% - that's a very overbought reading. "Of course, it can stay overbought for a while. Last November, this indicator got up to 84% and stocks continued rallying anyway, until finally breaking down hard in January. I would also note that when this gauge climbed from a low near 12% in May 2004 to its high of 84% in November, the process took six months. But this year, the identical price spike occurred in only two months! That's some velocity, and is not a pace that is sustainable. So if the percentage of NYSE stocks above their 10-week moving average were to drop to 70%, I would take that as a clear sell signal. Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
"For now, however, I'm just paralyzed," Shartsis concluded. "This market is way too dangerous for my comfort level, but its positive momentum dampens my enthusiasm for selling stocks short. So I'm sitting on my hands. If I were long a lot of stock, I'd be selling into the current strength. But I wouldn't sell the market short until we see some sign that the market's positive momentum is breaking down. We haven't seen that yet." "Okay," we replied, "we'll keep our eyes peeled. Anything else bugging you, Jay?" "Of course...But that's what therapy is for," he quipped. "I think I've said enough for now." "Thanks Jay. Maybe we'll see you out on the beach sometime soon." [Ed. Note: If you prefer to follow the 'smart' money you need an experienced options guide. Steve Sarnoff has been living and breathing options for over twenty years. For a short time he is offering your entire money back if he doesn't deliver 12 winners of at least 100% within a year. To follow the 'smart' money, click here: The Smart Money Option --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Carl Swenlin The stock market doesn't move in a straight line, rather it zigzags higher (or lower) in response to alternate waves of buying and selling pressure. When we speak of the market as being "overbought" we mean that buying pressure has persisted long enough that it is likely to be exhausted. A good way to determine overbought (and oversold) conditions is by tracking the percentage of stocks above their 20-, 50-, and 200-day moving averages, indicators which measure market conditions in the short-, medium-, and long-term respectively. The chart shows this set of indicators for the stocks in the S&P 500 Index, and you will note that they are all approaching the 90% level, a level that represents the most extreme overbought conditions. Another notable feature on the chart is how the price index has been making higher highs compared to the series of lower tops on the index showing percentage of stocks above their 200-EMA (the exponentially-weighted version of the 200-day moving average). This is a negative divergence. Also, both the price index and the indicator are approaching overhead resistance. During a bull market, overbought conditions are not grounds for going short, but they will generally result in minor corrections or consolidations, so it is a good time to take a closer look at stop loss points. Since the bull market is nearly three years old, I think a higher degree of caution is warranted because the bull market is closer to its end than its beginning. [Ed. Note: Carl Swenlin is the President of decisionpoint.com, a website where you'll find all the info you need to make solid investment decisions, organized into charts and reports you can access with a click of your mouse. Find out more here: www.decisionpoint.com ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | | DOW | 10,623 | 10,706 | -18 | -1.5% | | S&P | 1,235 | 1,244 | 1 | 1.9% | | NASDAQ | 2,195 | 2,198 | 11 | 0.9% | | 10-year Treasury | 4.33% | 4.20% | 0.04 | 0.11 | | 30-year Treasury | 4.53% | 4.40% | 0.06 | -0.29 | | Russell 2000 | 683 | 683 | 3 | 4.8% | | Gold | $432.60 | $428.20 | $3.10 | -1.1% | | Silver | $7.28 | $7.17 | $0.05 | 6.8% | | CRB | 314.60 | 310.53 | 2.60 | 10.8% | | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $61.57 | $59.94 | $1.00 | 41.7% | | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.37 | JPY 112.12 | 1.07 | -8.6% | | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2229 | $1.2138 | -102 | 9.8% | | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7733 | $1.7564 | -157 | 7.6% |
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