Saturday, November 19, 2022

MARKET GYRATIONS

 


Nowhere better illustrates Wall Street’s febrile sentiment than the stock-derivatives market, where trading volumes are breaking records heading into Friday’s $2.1 trillion options expiration.

The monthly event, known as OpEx, has a reputation for stoking volatility as traders and dealers rebalance their big exposures en masse. Now, with demand for both bullish and bearish index contracts booming while hedging in single stocks explodes in popularity, OpEx comes at a precarious time.

Record Options Trading Shows Jitters Before $2 Trillion ‘OpEx’

  • The 4,000 level for S&P 500 is a battlefield for bulls, bears
  • Cboe put-call ratio for single stocks reaches a 25-year high

Twice this week, the S&P 500 has briefly surpassed 4,000 -- a battleground threshold for traders that has garnering the highest open interest among contracts set to roll out on Friday. The benchmark gauge has fallen in three of the past four sessions, after jumping more than 5% last Thursday on promising inflation data that sparked a wave of short covering and call buying. The index fell 0.3% to close at 3,947 Thursday.

Amateurs and professionals have been flocking to short-dated contracts to cope with the market whiplash of late, an activity that has exerted outsize impact on the underlying equities. That suggests Friday’s options runoff may expose stocks to further price swings. 

Options volume explodes in November, poised for a record month

Not everyone buys into the idea that derivatives wield this kind of power. But to some market watchers, it’s no coincidence that the OpEx week has seen stocks falling in eight out of the last 10 months. 

“Option prices and tails have dropped sharply and present a good opportunity” to add protective hedges, said RBC Capital Markets’ strategist Amy Wu Silverman, citing the possibility that entrenched inflation renews pressure on equities.

Federal Reserve-induced market gyrations are encouraging investors to go all-in on options to place bullish and bearish bets alike. About 46 million options contracts have changed hands each day in November, poised for the busiest month on record, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s up 12% from last month. 

The boom was in part driven by derivatives maturing within 24 hours. Such contracts made up a whopping 44% of S&P 500 options trading in the past month, according to an estimate by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists including Rocky Fishman. 

relates to Record Options Trading Shows Jitters Before $2 Trillion ‘OpEx’

Source: Goldman Sachs

At the same time hedging activity in single stocks just exploded. The Cboe equity put-call ratio on Wednesday soared to the highest level since 1997. From earnings blowups at tech giants to the uncertain path of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, volatility has been the only certainty in the market. 

Still, nothing is ever simple in this corner of Wall Street given mixed signals on investor positioning to glean sentiment. For example, judging by the S&P 500’s skew -- the relative cost of puts versus calls that has hovered near multiyear lows -- traders appear more sanguine.

And thanks to the short shelf-life of options that are currently in demand, open interest in S&P 500 contracts has increased at a much slower pace, rising only 4% from the day before the last OpEx. Though with 20 million contracts outstanding, the open interest was the highest since March 2020. 

Option traders are sanguine over S&P 500 but show uneasiness on single stocks

“We did see a lot of recent interest by call buyers and short-covering,” said Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers LLC. “One can argue that leaves us a bit more exposed to a down move, but the mood generally remains hopeful. That’s why Fed governors feel the need to continually remind us of their resolve to fight inflation.” 

While it’s not easy to get a clear picture about investor positioning in options, dislocations create opportunities for traders. 

Easing interest rate volatility will help the equity market stay contained, according to Goldman’s Fishman. He recommends buying puts on Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, to bet on potential calm into the yearend. The Cboe VVIX Index, a measure of the cost of VIX options, sat below its 20th percentile of a range in the last decade, an indication of attractive pricing, per Fishman. 

“Low skew and vol-of-vol point to diminished concern about tail risk,” he wrote in a note." 






Bearish bets are building in the stock market


 

Matt Phillips
2 minutes

The market is actually up this month, but bearish bets are building fast.

The big picture: A measure of sentiment from the options markets shows that bets on falling stock prices have sharply outpaced those expecting prices to rise.

  • This measure, known as the CBOE U.S. equity put/call ratio, has hit the highest — or most bearish — level on record in recent days.

How it works: The measure is a ratio of bets on falling prices, or "puts," versus bets on rising prices, known as "calls."

  • During the zaniest days of the meme stock boom in January 2021, the put/call ratio fell to some of the lowest levels on record.
  • That reflected near-manic levels of optimism, especially among retail investors, who were dominating the market.
  • Now, the put/call ratio is telegraphing incredibly depressed expectations for the stock market.

Yes, but: That might sound like a reason to run away from stocks. But oddly, market analysts usually see extreme levels of bearishness in investor sentiment as good news for stocks.

  • The put/call ratio is often used as a so-called contrarian indicator.
  • That means when it hits extreme levels of either glee or gloom, stocks tend to then go in the opposite direction — as all the negative or positive sentiment is already priced into the market.

What we're watching: As fun as it is to read the tea leaves of market sentiment, the only thing that seems to matter for stocks right now is what the Fed does with interest rates.

 

www.marketwatch.com

Three seasonal effects in the stock market begin around Thanksgiving, and this year it's time to buy this asset class

Lawrence G. McMillan
1 - 2 minutes

MarketWatch Options Trader

Small-cap stocks tend to outperform large-cap stocks over a six-week period

Getty Images

The stock market started what appeared to be another leg up in the past week, as the benchmark S&P 500 broke out over resistance at 3900 points.

In fact, the index rose to 4020 but then ran into trouble. There is support at 3900, but if that level is violated, the recent jump would be, in reality, a false breakout. So there is a struggle between the bulls and bears for control, right at current levels.

 

Ticking-Time Bomb: Bombshell NYTimes Report...and then the News-Cycle Denials

Verbatim from HuffPost: (...As he told the Times, the goal was to strengthen the conservative justices’ resolve to put out hardline opinions.)

 


www.huffpost.com

Justice Samuel Alito Leaked Hobby Lobby Decision On Contraception In 2014: Report


Sara Boboltz
5 - 6 minutes

"Conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito allegedly told private dinner companions how the high court would rule in the landmark 2014 case of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, according to a bombshell report in The New York Times.

The dinner companions, who were wealthy donors to an evangelical Christian nonprofit, reportedly tipped off the minister who led the nonprofit, Rev. Rob Schenck, who told the Times he later informed the CEO of Hobby Lobby.

Schenck also used the information “undetectably” to assist “in preparing for the inevitable announcement” of the court’s decision, which he wrote in a letter to Chief Justice John Roberts earlier this year which was obtained and published by the Times.

The minister, whose beliefs have changed in recent years, provided “thousands” of emails and other records to the Times showing how he campaigned for decades to lay the legal groundwork for the Supreme Court to eventually overturn Roe v. Wade, the decision that legalized abortion nationwide in 1973.

The 2014 contraception case prompted the court to decide whether requiring a company to provide contraception as part of its health coverage violated religious freedom protections. Hobby Lobby’s conservative Christian owners said they were opposed to contraception use. The result was a victory for the craft store chain and religious conservatives ― much like the court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, rolling back abortion rights for millions of people.

Alito denies tipping the court’s hand eight years ago, the Times reported.

But the accusation comes at a contentious moment where swaths of the nation have already begun questioning the court’s legitimacy and its station above politics.

Alito himself weighed in on that criticism in September when he said that “saying or implying that the court is becoming an illegitimate institution or questioning our integrity crosses an important line.” Last week, he walked onstage to thunderous applause from conservatives gathered at a 40th anniversary gala for the Federalist Society, which has worked to place right-wing justices on the Supreme Court.

Schenck turned whistleblower this year after the Supreme Court’s monumental decision against abortion rights was leaked in draft form to Politico, sparking nationwide protests. Roberts said the court was investigating that leak, but no further developments have been shared with the public.

In his letter to the chief justice, Schenck wrote, “Considering there may be a severe penalty to be paid by whoever is responsible for the initial leak of the recent draft opinion, I thought this previous incident might bear some consideration by you and others involved in the process.”

He added: “Of course, I would be happy to fully cooperate should you find any value in other details surrounding what I have transmitted here.”

Schenck signed the letter, “Yours in the interest of truth and fairness.”

He told The New York Times he has not received any response.

Schenck has long been a controversial figure. He was arrested in 1992 for helping to thrust a human fetus in a clear plastic container at Bill Clinton, then a presidential contender, while he was out in New York City.

The minister no longer subscribes to hard-right views on reproductive rights, though. In 2019 he penned an editorial for the Times explaining himself, saying that his experiences speaking with poor and struggling parents in Alabama jails helped shift his perspective.

“I can no longer pretend that telling poor pregnant women they have just one option — give birth and try your luck raising a child, even though the odds are stacked against you — is ‘pro-life’ in any meaningful sense,” he wrote. The religious right’s obsession with gun rights also alienated him.

While the Hobby Lobby leak has not been previously reported, parts of Schenck’s anti-abortion campaign, which he called “Operation Higher Court,” have already been published in outlets such as Politico and Rolling Stone.

Schenck set up his campaign operations in a building right by the Supreme Court. He told Politico that between 1995 and 2018, he arranged to fly about 20 couples to socialize with Alito and his fellow ultraconservatives on the bench: Justice Clarence Thomas and the late Justice Antonin Scalia.

As he told the Times, the goal was to strengthen the conservative justices’ resolve to put out hardline opinions".

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Fully-Vaccinated: John Kerry comes down with Covid at climate summit

 


News

22 hours ago · “He is working with his negotiations team and foreign counterparts by phone to ensure a successful outcome of” the U.N. climate summit in Egypt.
22 hours ago · “He is working with his negotiations team and foreign counterparts by phone to ensure a successful outcome of” the U.N. climate summit in Egypt.
22 hours ago · U.S. special presidential envoy for climate John Kerry speaks Thursday during a session on the Global Methane Pledge at the COP 27 climate ...
20 hours ago · Kerry is reportedly thinking about stepping down from his role as climate envoy after the U.N. conference. The Biden administration has said ...
22 hours ago · US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry is isolating after testing positive for Covid-19, complicating efforts to reach a new ...
21 hours ago · It also adopts a call to phase down all fossil fuels — a measure first proposed by India and a dramatic step up from previous commitments to ...
18 hours ago · On what was to be his final day the COP27 climate summit, envoy John Kerry tested positive for COVID-19, a complication in already ...
Missing: down | Must include:down
20 hours ago · SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (AP) — John Kerry, the top U.S. envoy at this year's U.N. climate talks in Egypt, has tested positive for COVID-19, a spokesperson ...
19 hours ago · A spokeswoman says Kerry continues to work by phone. The news comes as talks are headed into the weekend, after the Friday deadline came and ...
21 hours ago · John Kerry at the COP27 summit on Nov. 16 in Egypt. Photo: Dominika Zarzycka/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images.

From Politico Staff: This week's Cartoon Carousel

 

The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

Excavated in Sweden: 3-Feet Long Upright Viking Swords in a 1200 Years-Old Site

The excavation has been ongoing for two years to make way for the construction and broadening of a highway between two cities.

www.newsweek.com

Mystery Upright Viking Swords at 1,200-Year-Old Burial Site Unearthed



Pandora Dewan 
Photo of one of the swords sticking up from the ground. 
The weapons are made of heavy iron and are roughly 3 feet long. The Archaeologists/National Historical Museums, CC BY
Photo of one of the swords sticking up from the ground. The weapons are made of heavy iron and are roughly 3 feet long. The Archaeologists/National Historical Museums, CC BY
4 - 6 minutes

"Two ancient Viking swords have been unearthed from a stone burial chamber in central Sweden during a highway excavation. The weapons had been left untouched for roughly 1,200 years and provide an insight into the lives of the people who lived there.

The discovery was made in Viby/Norrtuna, in the province of Västmanland, in a large burial field with around 100 graves, dating back to the Late Iron Age between 600 and 1000 AD.

Anton Seiler, an archaeologist involved in the excavation from Sweden's State Historical Museums, told Newsweek why this site was so well preserved.

✓ "In the region, burial sites from the Viking Age are often located on ridges, and therefore they have not been damaged by agricultural work in later centuries," he said.

"Previous excavations have shown that many Viking Age graves in the region contain weapons and horse equipment. Presumably, this shows a regional network of armed people, to secure, for example, trade routes and production at the farms," Seiler added.

"Only some 20 Viking Age graves with swords from Västmanland are known, despite several hundreds of graves being excavated during the 19th to 21st centuries. This clearly shows that these graves with swords from Viby/Norrtuna are very uncommon."

✓ The swords themselves were stood upright in the middle of the burial chambers. They are made of heavy iron and measure roughly 3 feet long, although it is hard to determine their exact length as they were both shattered when they were pressed into the ground. The weapons have also withstood more than 1,000 years of degradation

  . . .What remains of the graves' inhabitants has been submitted for scientific analysis to determine their age and gender, and whether several individuals had been buried in the same grave.

"Given the swords, it is tempting to think that these graves must contain men, in other words that the owners were male warriors. But we cannot be sure of this," Seiler said.

✓ "Female warriors during the Viking Age have been widely discussed in research in recent years, and swords may also have been deposited in children's graves to show them belonging to a prominent family.

✓ "The swords may also reflect an investment from the farm as a whole, a symbolic act from the collective of relatives to manifest power structures in the immediate area."

The weapons were sent for conservation immediately after they were excavated. "After conservation, when the fragments are pieced together, we will be able to determine the exact length and shape of the swords," Seiler said. "Wear and any possible battle damage will also be visible after conservation."

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CLASSIC ART MEMES Zara Zentira