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FWZoner

05/07/10 12:20 PM

#11108 RE: bbetts #11106

I, for one, could care less whether you're off topic here...keep 'em coming plz!!!

fedverm

05/07/10 12:49 PM

#11112 RE: bbetts #11106

bbetts,

Your previous rumour about Citi has proven to be more or less accurate.

So your macro economic insights are very much welcome as some of us hold positions relative to some key economic indicators as well :)

cheers

ezbiz123

05/07/10 2:37 PM

#11122 RE: bbetts #11106

Ditto that!!!

sl62

05/08/10 12:20 AM

#11149 RE: bbetts #11106

ty for your kind remarks bbetts...happy to help out. ditto on your adds as well...I did see a story tonight about the ECB meeting in Brussels and the aide package to be announced this weekend. thnx...

FWIW, I received an interesting article in my mailbox this AM that I just read from Jon Najerian (Options Monster/Fast Money and a fairly reliable market insider source). Seems that a hedgie might have been unwound this past week. Perfect timing for the bears to jump on top of that and help further this correction. I know CNBC, who began salivating this week over the prospect of fear-mongering again to help their SAGGING RATINGS over the past 6mo while the market has been stable and UPTRENDING, jumped all over this. Guess who this morning's guest was on Squawk? Yes, the one and only doomsayer, Rubini. No surprise there. Pulling out all the stops for ratings.

Jobs report was stellar this AM. Bodes well for the summer rally now and for consumerism in general...esp where ti relates to consumption of MRNJ app products...looking good! gl

>>Rumors of Hedge Fund Liquidation
By Jon "DRJ" Najarian

The rumors have been out there all week, about a hedge fund or funds being liquidated, and that certainly could be true. Today's move, particularly in the last hour, makes it feel as though that could indeed be happening.
Someone pulled the trigger on closing a big player yesterday two hours into the bell, and the market then settled down in the final hour. Today they've matched that pattern exactly, but I doubt we will see much calming by the close.

If you have dry powder this is when you deploy, but the smart money may not want to do that into the weekend. It is a perfect storm for the bears, of which I was one!
We show 2.6 to 1 puts trading in the S&P 500 Exchange-Traded Fund (SPY). The May options in the SPY show more than 1.4 million puts trading from a total of 2.2 million puts as of this writing.
On the selloff the VIX followed a scary but predictable pattern: Panic lifts volatility, which is usually met with selling, retracing the VIX to half of its recent gain. This played out, as the volatility index shot to 27.23 yesterday, then pulled back to $23.50. But then that predictable second wave of panic hit, and the volatility popped to new highs today, now nearing 35.
The VIX was coming from a multi-month low in the mid-15s only three weeks ago, indicating that there was little fear and the options were pricing in confidence, or some might say overconfidence.
The options in the farther-out months have expanded like crazy. Here is what the June 2011 straddle at the 1150 strike was and where it is now: Ten days ago the June 2011 1150 straddle priced at $158. Today it is $233 -- a move of $75, or 47 percent.
But hang on, that is pricing the straddle at a 25 volatility. If we were to price in 30 -- the front-month VIX contract has already topped 32 -- then the straddle would price at $280, a 77 percent increase!
Disclosure: No positions<<

fedverm

05/10/10 6:52 AM

#11155 RE: bbetts #11106

bbets,

I have to say, I do like your resources. Your rumors were once again true.

And as I said in my previous post, financials are all of a sudden very interesting again!

cheers