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I am also in the camp that
TSLA should be at 500 max -
I also agree that the split throws in uncertainty -
With it being such an unpredictable item, I would have a
real problem going with any position on it more than a couple of months out, but your position is a good one.....
Selling an item that is so far out of the money here.
Usually a great way to make money - and many times the best part of that angle of approach is to go with the shorter duration and let the "time decay" do the work for you.
TSLA - Stopped out for 6.12% gain.
TSLA - Upon further consideration. I think I going to be closing out my TSLA short call position today. That, or I will drop my stop loss down to breakeven. I am concerned about the hype around a stock split. I haven't decided yet.
Update: Typed this out earlier before market open but failed to send.
With the nas weakness this am. I reduced my stop loss to a small profit.
TSLA - Sometimes in a fit of insanity I sell TSLA calls. Last year I sold 2 January 2022 $1700 calls for $110.00. They expired worthless for a $22,000 gain.
Yesterday I sold 1 January 2023 $1650 call for $98. I put a $130 stop loss on it. So, TSLA has to trade above $1748 by next January expiration for me to lose money. Or if I get stopped out, I will re-assess if it gets close.
So what is TSLA's market cap at $1748? $1.8 trillion.
AMZN current market cap is $1.66 T
GOOGL at $1.84T
I have a hard time seeing TSLA having a higher market cap than AMZN, and just a little under GOOGL's.
Interesting - Thanks -
Selling has dried up....
84.80% % of Float Held by Institutions
ATIP - btw, in at 1.90
XLE - 180 mil barrel release from SPR and XLE is flat. Interesting. Natural gas prices firm.
ATIP - Taking a small position here. Really beat up physical therapy chain. Looks like many institutional buyers coming in after big sell-off last year. Down 80% from a year ago. Down 44% YTD.
SA article
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4498812-ati-physical-therapy-atip-down-not-out
https://fintel.io/so/us/atip
Not sure what you are saying. I was wishing there was a way to lock your account at the current balance without having to sell your positions. I understand hedging and occasionally use S&P puts but it is hard to get a balanced book that remains neutral. I know there is not such an option without going to cash but wishful thinking.
That said, I am glad I did not freeze my accounts. Up nicely since posting.
In a cash account if you don't have options you could do it.
CDRpC - Someone posted on SA that a lawyer looks to be filing for an injunction to stop this merger from taking place as currently structured.
I bought my CDRpC shares just after the announcement at a better yield than the B shares. About a week ago the B's dropped to have a better yield than the C's so I sold half and bought B's. Today the yield on the C's is 14%, and the B's at 12.5%. Took the profit on the B's and replaced with an equal dollar amount of C's. Increased my holding with the profit and have a much better yield. All in a ROTH so no tax consequences. If the C's had the same yield as the B's here as I type they would be $1.55 higher or 13.6%. I even included the bid/ask spread. Both transactions filled better than the bid/ask.
I have increased my position size to about 2.5%. If the lawsuit is filed I expect CDR the common shares to take a hit. Shorted a starter position of CDR at 27.65. I see no reason why the court would not give the preferred the injunction they are looking for.
Thanks! I need to do better at recognizing and measuring risk and reward and adjusting my position size accordingly. I thought this trade had little downside with a management offer on the table at $4.25 and the shares trading slightly above. I can't complain about my gain but when re-evaluating my trade I should have had more shares. I think I had a 1% speculative position. I should have had 2%.
I agree, and what makes it
All the more treacherous and a total mine field is when we're looking at a news driven picture...
We look at the chart and the upward channel is clearly there, but...
We know that at any point a "black swan" or news release could send me futures down 2%.
Ugly liquidation breaks always possible...
It makes it hard to hold anything overnight, short or long... And sleep well.
Probably one of the best examples are the precious metals, a store of value "forever",
and with the current market and economic conditions, they should roar...
With inflation, with the levels of debt, with the fiat currency reliance, with sanctions and not
knowing what banks own the debt bombs, etc...
And yet, gold and silver are full of volatility... And have been for years.
Very nice... Monster gain!
HMLP - sold another third of the position for another 72% gain. HMLP I think only has 5 liquid natural gas storage units. Always uncomfortable something will happen to one that will pull the shares down. Probably sell the remainder tomorrow.
Added some ALINprB. Long shot trade that I will probably have to wait for. Perhaps years! Arrgh! Selling for about $5 here. $1.50 in accumulated dividends. A little over 1% of port here. Better positioned than HMLP for more upside in my opinion.
Here you go...
https://discord.gg/5hsKTHrN
https://discord.gg/5uufYUwv
Either one should work -
My name there is the same as here -
Here's a video clip of an individual who IMHO -
really knows the market -
https://www.youtube.com/user/shadowtrader01/videos
and this week's clip is very interesting because of how he goes into the trading day.
It is very comparable to the discord site - in that the main individual, TechniT, has his own system and "has ideas" of what will occur during the day, as far as support and resistance points, or where the trading activity could "flow to"...
and then there are other posters and areas which people are posting info and ideas, etc...
A good community where you don't have to worry about ego's or snide remarks, etc...
There are tutorials in the FAQ area and also in the pinned messages area at the top of the page.
Many of the posters have come from the Ihub site - many of them have the same screen name here as there, so if you would want, you could "research them" on Ihub...
I actually became familiar with many of them here, before the discord site, and so I know many of them are competent and intelligent.
Main goal is to share info and to try to identify profitable points, whether it's for 2 hours or 2 weeks.
"With regard to food shortage, yes we did talk about food shortages, and it's gonna be real," Biden said
And the S&P rallies! And the 10 year rallies 6%.
Food shortages? That can lead to strong civil discontent. Many people live paycheck to paycheck as it is. I am taking a serious look at how this plays out. Scary times.
CDRprC - Replying this post where I said I bought CDR-A. That is a misprint. I bought the C's. That said, at a point this week the B's got cheap and higher yield that C's so I bought some B's and sold some A's. I then even added a little more B's. 2% of port now.
I have been commenting a good bit on a SA article under Joe Eifrid.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4495571-take-a-shower-after-reading-the-wheelercedar-merger
I think this one will see a court filing to stop this merger for reasons I discuss. No court filing and the merger approved I will sell some if not all. The B's were showing a current yield of about 18% when I bought. At that yield I don't see much downside. If this goes like I think, and CDR is forced to payoff the preferreds to make the deal go through, par is at 25.00 for a 143% gain. Very compelling risk/reward IMO.
SMLP - Saw this post today in a SA article. With moves in natural gas I would not be surprised to see SMLP more positive on the next quarter CC.
" So Europe is chronically short gas and the U.S. wants to grow production to help them. SMLP's pipelines are mostly gas outside of the Bakken. The Utica and Marcellus can easily ramp up. And the Double E gas volumes should also ramp as you can't flare gas in New Mexico and you have the trunk line to get the gas from the Waha to the Gulf Coast for LNG......
$SMLP's equity is arguably the most torqued to natural gas than anyone else given the small equity as a percentage of its enterprise value combined with how under utilized its systems are...
For example, $TELL is ripping, yet the project is years away and the cost to build new trains has gone way up (think about the price of steel and other components), not to mention the amount of dilution required to raise the equity to build it....
All of $SMLP's infrastructure is built out...so $SMLP is TORQUED to higher gas volumes behind its system.... HELLLO, Mr. Market? Are you there...."
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4493808-summit-midstream-conservative-fy-2022-guidance
I added some this am for a trade. Now about 3% in to this stock now. More than what I am comfortable of about 2% of port. I have a stop loss on new shares at 14.50.
JXN- Got back in flat from where I sold. Did some more research. I liked what I saw. 2% position.
HMLP- Sold a third of the position for 47% gain. More and more it appears that the US will be exporting natural gas to the world. HMLP unit will be in high demand. I have high hopes for my ALINprA and B preferred shares. Altera Infrastructure seems to be nicely positioned for natural gas exposure.
FLNG - Sold the remainder of shares for 22% gain. Sitting near top trend line resistance. Not playing breakouts. Rather take profits in this market and increase cash in hopes of better buys.
I wish there was a way to call your brokerage and have them freeze your account at current levels with out trading out of positions. If that is what could be done that is what I would do right now. Too much of a chance for a black swan event.
In a small way that is what the ultra short ETFs do to help me hedge. I know about the daily calculation decay but I look at it day to day.
Bear market rallies and trend change rallies are very strong and fast.
Good luck and happy trading.
TECS - Contrarian trade and hedging. Nasdaq has come up too high and too fast with all of the uncertainty there is in my opinion. Who know what happens over the weekend. TECS is a 3x short tech. Long at 34.51 here near the close.
Sold some other stuff. Portfolio is about 2.5% from all time highs. Too much risk out there for me to stay very long.
JXN - Sold for 15.3% gain. Not that I don't like it here. Just a good quick profit and it is trading near past resistance and the market fundies suck.
Here is something I wrote in I think September of 2007. Along the same lines. Poured my brain in to studying this stuff and nobody cared. I found better things to do. lol!
Goldman’s Quasi-Monopoly Earnings Report
Goldman Sachs (GS) – you know Goldman Sachs. They came out with an earnings report today. But first a little background.
Goldman gave us Robert Rubin, former Chairman of Goldman. He is the gentleman President Clinton called on to be Secretary Treasurer of the United States in 1995. During his tenure he orchestrated the bailout of Mexico, Asia, Long Term Capital Management, and Y2K. He is no stranger to moral hazard. His actions show that he actually embraced it. I think he was also responsible for Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan to change his ways. After Greenspan uttered those famous words - “irrational exuberance” and knocked the equity markets for a loop in 1996, Greenspan became much more respectful of those that kept him in power. I thought that Greenspan meant what he said at the time with strong foundation, but his actions afterwards where of a different tune. Enough so that he bowed to the whims of both the Clinton and Bush administrations, taking irrational exuberance to bubble proportions.
Goldman also gave us John Thain. John is now CEO of the New York Stock Exchange. Mr. Thain helped to complete the reverse takeover of the NYSE by Archipelago in 2005. As you may have guessed – Archipelago’s largest owner - Goldman Sachs.
Well, who is the current Secretary Treasurer of the United States? It is Henry Paulson, former CEO and Chairman of Goldman Sachs. Mr. Paulson took the reins in early 2006. Yet another Goldman guy.
Everyday the Federal Reserve operates an open market operation to add and subtract liquidity from our financial system. This is where the big NYSE member banks go to get additional funds. I can’t think of another person that may be more important to a financial firm like Goldman Sachs on a daily basis. I am sure the Federal Reserve looked far and wide for someone to run this very important unit as it oversees domestic open market and foreign exchange trading operations as well as the provisions of account services to foreign central banks.
They picked Goldman Sachs former Chief Economist, William Dudley. An ‘economist’ for a trading operation? I know, it doesn’t sound right to me but maybe he takes direction well. William took this post in late 2006.
World Bank, you ask? Who runs the World Bank? The President of the World Bank is Robert Zoellick. Mr. Zoellick spent most of his career working for various governmental agencies. No Goldman connection here? Almost. He resigned in June 2006 to join Goldman. After a one year stint of indoctrination of how things work at Goldman, and who truly butters his bread, he was appointed World Bank President in June of 07’.
So, former Goldman people are in place as the United States Secretary Treasurer, the head of the NYSE, the head of the trading operations at the Federal Reserve (an economist at that), and President of the World Bank. Big deal? It gets better.
Just after the 1987 stock market crash the President of the US signed an executive order forming a committee of government and private individuals to monitor the financial markets. This group was named the ‘Working Group’. We traders have nicknamed this group the Plunge Protection Team – the PPT. Their mandate was to make sure all steps were taken to make sure nothing like that crash would happen again.
In 1998 the financial world was shaken by the financial shenanigans of a hedge fund named Long Term Capital Management. ( ‘Long Term’ lol!) After which time the US President’s Working Group approached the major NYSE member banks and said, “hey guys, listen, we ain’t suppose to let things like this happen. You guys need to get your act together.”
These banks formed the Counterparty Risk Management Policy Group (CRMPG) The members are the top NYSE member banks, General Motors, a couple of hedge funds, and some well connected law firms and accounting firms. The group met and produced a document but was asked again in 2004 by the Working Group to come with more defined policy procedure. This effort resulted in the publication titled ‘Toward Greater Financial Stability: A Private Sector Perspective’.
Who was the leader of this group? Gerald Corrigan, Chairman of Goldman Sachs. Who was the transmittal letter addressed to at the opening of the report? Henry Paulson, then CEO and Chairman of Goldman Sachs, now US Secretary Treasurer. Who developed the policy? Well here is an excerpt from the transmittal letter; “I want to express to you my sincere gratitude for the time and effort devoted to this project by Craig Broderick who served as a Member of the Policy Group and the others from Goldman Sachs who participated in the project and are named in the Report.”
Link to the report; www.crmpolicygroup.org/docs/CRMPG-II.pdf
Here is what the CRMPG stated as their primary purpose; “The primary purpose of CRMPG II — building on the 1999 report of CRMPG I — is to examine what additional steps should be taken by the private sector to promote the efficiency, effectiveness and stability of the global financial system. As practitioners, the members of CRMPG II recognize that periodic financial disruptions and shocks are inevitable. However, the Policy Group also believes that it is possible to take steps that would be capable of reducing the frequency of such shocks and, especially, to reduce the risk that such shocks would take on the contagion features that can produce systemic damage to the financial system and the real economy.”
Again it appears the CRMPG mandate is to control the markets. How else are they to reduce the frequency of periodic financial disruptions.
CRMPG: “since we know that financial disturbances and even financial shocks will occur in the future, and we know that no approaches to risk management or official supervision are fail-safe, we also know that we must preserve and strengthen the institutional arrangements whereby, at the point of crisis, industry groups and industry leaders, as well as supervisors, are prepared to work together in order to serve the larger and shared goal of financial stability.”
We need to work together for financial stability? What does that mean for the public or retail investor? Obviously every trade has a counterparty. If these firms get in trouble with sub-prime loans, is it their idea to transfer that risk to the public to insure their financial stability and therefore the stability of the US economy as what they represent, as we can not have failing banks and a strong economy. But it would be acceptable to have a block of retail investors (small counterparties) suffering financial disruptions as long as it did not affect the general public or the greater good of the large NYSE money center banks?
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan acknowledges the CRMPG and their collective “eye” on the market in a speech he gave in 2002; “In today's markets there is an increased reliance on private counterparty surveillance as the primary means of financial control. Governments supplement private surveillance when they judge that market imperfections could lead to sub-optimal economic performance.” Link to speech; http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2002/200209252/default.htm
That leads me to Program Trading. Program trading ran about 16 to 19% of all shares traded on the NYSE from 1987 to 1998 when the Long Term Capital diabolical hit. Since that it has climbed to 65-75% of all shares traded on the NYSE.
The NYSE stock exchange issues a weekly report on Program Trading. For the week ending August 31st, program trading accounted for 73% of all shares traded on the NYSE. Now you will look at this report and see that it says 36.5%. What gives? Well, the NYSE formerly reported program trading as both sides of the trade. They did this for a couple of decades, or the inception of program trading. (Program trading is defined as a trade of 15 or more issues with a value over one million dollars.) Then in June of 2006, shortly after the Goldman guy took over, they changed the reporting to just one side of the trade. In addition, they deleted all past reports from their news archives. One day they were there, the next they were all gone. The old way of reporting worked for many years giving a more accurate summation of total program trading. I continue to use that number as it is more truthful. Link to recent report; http://www.nyse.com/pdfs/PT082707.pdf
Now you may suspect who the top program trader is. Well, sometimes it is Goldman but lately it has been Lehman Brothers. However, if you look at program trades made as the broker being the principal and not acting as an agent for others, Goldman does indeed take the top spot. For the referenced report they accounted for 25% of all program trades made as principal. Looking farther we see that the top six firms accounted for 69% of all program trades, or 50% of ALL shares traded on the NYSE. 50% of all shares traded in the hands of program traders of just six firms that are all members of the CRMPG, with the goal working together for the greater good? How would you like to be on the other side of those trades?
Again Greenspan in his speech of 2002 says it best.” To require disclosure of the structure of the innovative product either before or after its introduction would immediately eliminate the quasi-monopoly return and discourage future endeavors to innovate in that area.”
Quasi-monopoly returns! That, my friends, leads me to Goldman’s third quarter earnings release today. Earnings were up an eye-popping 88% from last year. It was as though Goldman was on the right side of every trade.
But how could this be? We saw the headlines;
‘Goldman's Exclusive Hedge Fund Drops By 10%’
‘Goldman hedge fund falls 22.5 pct in Aug’
Well, you see, Goldman doesn’t manage OTHER peoples money quite like it manages it’s own.
From the report - Asset Management (money they manage for others), Goldman: “Asset Management net revenues were $1.20 billion, 31% higher than the third quarter of 2006, reflecting a 40% increase in management and other fees, partially offset by lower incentive fees.”
Lower incentive fees? Fees were down 52% from last year. Incentive fees reflect doing a good job. Looks like their performance was lacking from last year.
Goldman: “During the quarter, assets under management increased $38 billion to $796 billion, reflecting money market net inflows of $31 billion, non-money market net inflows of $19 billion spread across all asset classes, and net market depreciation of $12 billion, reflecting depreciation in equity and alternative investment assets, partially offset by appreciation in fixed income assets.”
Increase of $38 billion. That’s a lot of money but still just 5% increase. But with $38 billion in net inflows after depreciation it appears that they had negative organic return on the assets that manage.
All on all, the money they manage for OTHERS had a bad quarter.
Now look at their proprietary trading unit – THEIR money. Trading and Principal Investments were $8.23 billion, 70% higher than the third quarter of 2006. Equity trading revenues were up a mind boggling 154%. This is in quarter were we saw a rough drop of about 3% in the S&P500.
Goldman: “Significant losses on non-prime loans and securities were more than offset by gains on short mortgage positions.”
They shorted mortgage positions with THEIR money! Shorting mortgages – a bet that citizens will default on their loans and possibly lose their homes. Goldman made money when things were good by pushing these sub-prime loans, now they win again when they go sour.
OTHER peoples money (OTM); NEW YORK, Sept 13 (Reuters) – “Goldman Sachs Group's Global Alpha hedge fund fell 22.5 percent in August on losses from currency and stock trades, Bloomberg News reported, citing an update sent to investors.”
Goldman has the largest collection of hedge funds in the world. How is it that they receive 75% of their revenues from trading, but the hedge funds they manage for other people’s money under-perform the returns Goldman receives on its OWN money? When Goldman’s hedge funds are long sub-prime, why did not the shorting of mortgages strategy that they used for THEIR money save some of the OTHER people’s money? Trading is a zero sum gain. Did Goldman need someone to take the other side of the trade?
Greenspan said this in the same speech above; “Most financial innovations in over-the-counter derivatives involve new ways to disperse risk. Moreover, our constantly changing financial environment supplies a steady stream of new opportunities for innovation to address market imperfections. Innovative products temporarily earn a quasi-monopoly rent.”
I think everyone would have to agree that Goldman has been very innovative in benefiting from market imperfections. They place their former executives in high positions of public power. They manage the CRMPG that allows them insight into the inside workings of their competitors. They have been aggressive in their managed hedge funds by establishing a counter-party to their trades. They certainly are getting their share on THEIR money with “quasi-monopoly rent”.
And they are getting paid well to do it.
Goldman: “Compensation and benefits expenses were $5.92 billion, 68% higher than the third quarter of 2006” The number employees increased only 7%. Nice raise guys!
So how does Goldman get away with this? Obviously the influence peddling is there. Why is the financial community of the slightly less connected not out there screaming about the potential for collusion and manipulation by these large member banks with their CRMPG association? Trading is a zero sum game. Why are so many willing to take a bullet for Goldman on an un-level playing field? I just read a commentary from Bill Bonner expressing some of what I mention here. He wrote this after a similar stunning Goldman report in June of 06’;
“Well, how is it possible that a company like Goldman – with thousands of traders – can make 75% of its revenues from trading? You'd think their lucky trades would be balanced out by their unlucky trades. They can't all be lucky. And they can't all be geniuses. As Buffett says, there aren't that many geniuses around.”
"Or to put it another way, here's a company making billions, mostly by trading. Who's on the other side of these trades? Who's losing? Where does the money come from? How is it possible for so many traders to have a result that is so far beyond equilibrium...it seems to defy gravity." Bill Bonner
So why do I care about all of this?
Greenspan (same speech) said this; “No one can deny that fully informed market participants will generate the most efficient pricing of resources and the most efficient allocation of capital. Moreover, it could be argued that, if all information held by individual buyers or sellers became available to all participants, the pricing structure would more closely reflect the underlying balance of supply and demand. Thus full information would appear to be the unambiguous objective. But should it be?”
“But should it be?” Hell yes it should be. Fully informed market participates is central to a free market. Allowing Goldman and the CRMPG, with the blessings of the Federal Reserve to sway the markets in the direction that benefits them most, in the name of financial stability is a bullet to the chest of capitalism. Who was Chairman Greenspan helping when he suggested adjustable rate mortgages at interest rate bottoms? Some kind of innovative sub-prime scheme perhaps? The time to save our free markets is now. The complacency bullshit needs to stop!
Joe Stocks
Nasdaq NMS one minute tick chart. I always wondered who initiates these huge buy programs that in less that two minutes takes the tick from negative -470 to a positive +738, a 1200 point move.
The NASDAQ NMS tick chart is the number of stocks that are net positive or negative over the prior minute. The blue line is zero meaning as many stocks traded positive as negative. How does buying sentiment change so quickly? Yes, it is buy programs but who can sway the market that much so quickly. I have watched this chart for years. In the early 2000's with was a very rare occurrence to see a 1000 point move. Now it happens many times a day. I use to have some old tick chart images but must have deleted.
Wow....
Very nice and much of that read is similar to "today's picture".
This should work...
https://discord.gg/G2ETGXFm
https://discord.gg/w9CqTMBw
Tell me if it doesn't...
Yes. I would be interested in checking out that board. Thanks!
Doing well. Just very busy with my pet project. Rockdale Art Farm on Facebook
Sold some stuff to raise a little more cash. Taking the elevator down on energy. Still like CHK for their return of capital to shareholders. I own very few names that do not pay a dividend, or like with BHF, strong buybacks, or like GNW and ACT, announcing plans to return capital in cash or buybacks.
CORR - Got out of this one yesterday for a breakeven. I expected a better quarterly report.
Welcome to the board!
Welcome to the board!
Joe
Interesting read. I haven't read lemetropolecafe for years. Back in the early 2000's they reposted something I wrote about the Counter Party Risk Policy Group and Goldman Sachs.
https://www.kitco.com/ind/Murphy/sep112006.html
Not even a climb here at
the end of the day.....
No reason for shorts to cover and
No reason for longs to climb in, I guess...
Uranium stocks down hard today.
I added the board, looking forward to for more interaction, good luck.
Hey Joe -
I am a member of a Discord board -
Very competent, intelligent group -
and I have invited them to start posting here -
Some of these members used to post on the Ihub SPY board -
and we know that board is "not efficient", to say the least.
I hope you're doing well -
and once again we see the morning strength just gets sold off -
Plenty of uncertainty..... and risk aversion.... still.
I was also going to send a note to the main guy of that Discord board -
to send you an invite - if you wanted.
I just added this board. Posting for reference.
Good interview here and
It sheds light on just how complex the ripples and risks
have become in the past month.
Check this article and
Here's one we may want on our radar....
WSTRF.
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=168181109
Friday actually surprised me...
Take a look at the chart below -
the 15 minute candles on the main ETF's.
Friday was a perfect opportunity for the Bulls to grab control and start climbing - To confirm support and start the upward rally.
We had green futures going into to open, we gapped up and then...
The Bulls fumbled badly and the selling just dominated the entire day, after the first hour. It wasn't so much a situation of shorts and Bears taking over as it was just a scenerio of distribution.
15 minute
This has become such a news driven market...
There is soo much uncertainty now - whether it is the Russia / Ukraine war, the Fed meeting this week and rate / stance questions, or even the China "quietness".
We can also see on the 60 minute chart, we may be getting a pennant and a "decision point". At this time, without any large, positive news, one has to think this pennant breaks downward and we go to below 410.
60 minute
I keep feeling a rally is "right around the corner", but downward channel markets can be brutal and last longer than you think.
That's why, at this time, it is best to just keep the powder dry and watch for the good buys to just keep getting cheaper.
A news driven market can move the ETF's 5% in 48 hours, so there is risk either way and the option premiums reflect that.... Watch for the overbought and/or oversold opportunities on the 5 minute charts and be nimble... That's about the only way to "make plays" here. That's exactly what occurred 90 minutes into the trading day on Friday. A put buyer, who recognized the upward fuel was fading... who saw the advance decliners was falling fast, was able to make good money.
Back onto my "ready for a rally" thoughts...
We're NOT oversold here and we haven't seen real capitulation signs...
We're still highly overvalued and expensive here on the longer term and so far, we're nowhere near a good, longer term buying spot here.
This chart shows the downward channel and that we're not heavily oversold, so whether you try to go long or short a bounce, be nimble and ready to grab profits quickly.
Again, in a news driven environment, with liquidation breaks occurring, you shouldn't think in "portfolio" terms.
Advance/decliners
SMLP - As I mentioned I was very disappointed with SMLP's 4Q report. many of us online, as well as there management were surised that more wells were not being put in service behind there pipelines.
Some thought management's outlook was too conservative for 2022-2023. Interesting read by someone who dug deeper in to the report.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4493808-summit-midstream-conservative-fy-2022-guidance
No longer seeing this play out like I had, I have trimmed mt position. But, with new emphasis on domestic drilling perhaps SMLP will do better than projected.
ACT - Insider buy. COO for 5,000 shares at market. Mortgage insurer spun off from GNW. Stock trades at 20.58 here. Compared to the metrics of the other mortgage insurers (ESNT, NMIH, RDN, MTG) ACT should be an easy $26.00 stock after they announce they will be setting a regular quarterly dividend. Something they said they will be doing this year. At $26 that would be a 26% upside.
GNW is greatly misunderstood. And greatly under-priced IMO. The holding company basically has two units. One being ACT that they spun-off but still own 81.6%. And the other is the US Life unit that includes long term care, life, and annuities. GNW sees that unit as worth zero to them for the foreseeable future. GNW plans to not invest anymore capital in this unit and they are on their own. ACT on the other hand has value to GNW. Their ACT position is worth about $2.74 bil here. That is about $5.39 a share. GNW is selling here at 3.77, a 30% discount. And of course GNW will be seeing dividends from ACT. And GNW receives tax income from both ACT and US Life.
RILY - Significant insider market buy by CEO of 30k shares posted this am.
CSIQ - Sold uncommitted shares here at 37.10 from the $28.03 buy.
Still hold the deep ITM covered call.
BHF looks a lot like JXN. BHF does not pay a dividend. Their preference is to buy back shares. And they buy back a lot.
This from the last conference call. Someone asked about the buybacks.
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