All posts by Michael Comeau

Did We Just See the Return of Volatility?

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Want to Kick Your Options Trading Up a Notch? My buddy Doug Robertson is hosting a FREE options trading webinar this Thursday where he’s teaching his secrets for generating major options profits in volatile markets. Click here for more information By Michael Comeau 1) The Return of Volatility Over the past two weeks, market volatility collapsed as the S&P 500 made a succession of all-time highs within an extremely tight trading range. And in fact, the S&P hasn’t had a real down day since June 27, when it fell -1.8% in the aftermath of the June 24 Brexit vote. The zero-volatility trend felt like it started to break today as the index dropped as much as -1.1% intraday  before finishing at 2156.2, down -0.7%. The Nasdaq Composite and Russell 2000 showing even bigger losses as traders cut down risk. Japan set off the selling by announcing a much smaller-than-expected increase in government spending, which sent the yen higher and global equities lower. The yen is seen as a key safety asset, and thus it tends to rise when markets are uncertain. But that wasn’t the only issue today… 2) Oil, Economic Data, Banks Crude oil gave up an early gain to slide back below the $40/barrel mark, which means it’s nearly 25% off the highs. Given that crude oil’s ascent was a major driver of equity market sentiment in the rally off the February 11 lows, a fast drop down can’t be good. We also saw some disappointing economic data, with Personal Income and PCE Deflator numbers missing expectations. This followed Friday’s lousy GDP report, which ended a pretty impressive streak of economic data beats. And finally, Germany’s Commerzbank lowered its full-year earnings forecast, with its stock dropping -8.5% intraday to a 24-year low. That put a chill under US banks. 3) So What’s Next? The pickup in volatility is a good thing, because it means fear is coming back into the market. That could be exactly what we need to reload for another leg higher following this sideways consolidation. But near-term, there’s a decent chance the market goes nowhere until Friday, when the eagerly-awaited July nonfarm payrolls report hits. Traders’ rate hike expectations have been declining since Friday’s GDP report. But strong jobs numbers could flip that around in a jiffy, which could send positive reverberations throughout global markets, which is exactly what we saw last month. Wednesday Preview US Economics (Time Zone: EDT) 07:00 MBA Mortgage Applications (7/29): prior -11.20% 08:15 ADP Employment Change (Jul): exp. 170k, prior 172k 09:45 Markit US Services PMI (Jul F): exp. 51, prior 50.9 09:45 Markit US Composite PMI (Jul F): prior 51.5 10:00 ISM Non-Manf. Composite (Jul): exp. 55.9, prior 56.5 10:30 DOE U.S. Crude Oil Inventories (7/29): exp. -2000k, prior 1671k 10:30 DOE Cushing OK Crude Inventory (7/29): exp. 275k, prior 1110k 10:30 DOE U.S. Gasoline Inventories (7/29): exp. -1000k, prior 452k 10:30 DOE U.S. Distillate Inventory (7/29): exp. -500k, prior -780k 10:30 DOE U.S. Refinery Utilization (7/29): exp. 0.00%, prior -0.80% 10:30 DOE Crude Oil Implied Demand (7/29): prior 16713 10:30 DOE Gasoline Implied Demand (7/29): prior 10250.9 10:30 DOE Distillate Implied Demand (7/29): prior 5122.4 Global Economics 04:30 GBP Services PMI 21:30 AUD Retail Sales m/m Earnings Before the Open: 3D Systems (DDD) Charles River Laboratories (CRL) Humana (HUM) After the Close: Albemarle Corp (ALB) Allstate Corp (ALL) Continental Resources (CLR) J2 Global (JCOM) Oasis Petroleum (OAS) Tesla Motors (TSLA)

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You Need G.U.T.S. to Beat F.A.N.G.

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The fabulous F.A.N.G. stocks — FB, AMZN, NFLX, GOOG/GOOGL — led the market in 2015 with a stunning 77.5% gain. Coming into 2016, many traders predicted the mighty F.A.N.G. trade would lost its leadership status. And to some extent that’s not happened. 2016 has been led by another acronym, which I’ve dubbed G.U.T.S.: Gold (GLD): +28.2% Utilities (XLU): +19.7% Treasuries (TLT): 14.3% Silver (SLV): +48.9% That’s an average of 27.8%, though I could skew it higher by tossing in GDX (+128.6%) or GDXJ (+168.9%). The G.U.T.S. trade has worked for 2 simple reasons. Relative to 2015, traders’ expectations for Fed rate hikes are way, way lower. Meanwhile, global financial uncertainty has risen and overseas central banks have pushed down their currencies and rates, in turn increasing demand for US securities, pushing down our rates. That said, the death of the F.A.N.G. trade has been overstated. Thanks to strong earnings trends, FB and AMZN are up 18.5% and 12.6% YTD respectively, offsetting NFLX’ -18.4% decline and GOOG/GOOGL’s barely positive performance. As of this morning, F.A.N.G. is up 3.3% YTD, so it’s actually outperforming the Nasdaq Composite (+3.1% YTD). It’s also doing better than the ultimate risk-on heavyweight, biotech. IBB is down -13.4% and XBI is offf -9.9% YTD.

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Earnings Season Stinks… Just Not As Much As We Thought

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We came into earnings season with remarkably low expectations. But it turns out things don’t stink that much. FactSet just updated their earnings season stats, and as of Friday, things stink — just not as much as they were expected to. At the end of Q2, traders expected a revenue decline of -0.8%. And as of last week, actual results have dragged that number up to +0.1%. 57% of companies have beaten revenue forecasts, which is slightly above the 55% 5-year average. Consumer discretionary (namely AMZN), Tech (think AAPL), Health Care, and Financials have been leading the way The earnings side is looking decent too. Q2 is showing a -3.7% earnings decline. Now that’s pretty bad on its head, but at the end of Q2, analysts expected a -5.5% decline. The conclusion: once again, earnings season stinks… just not as much as we thought. And remember, these numbers don’t reflect today’s solid earnings reports from Pfizer (PFE), CVS (CVS), and others. This is another reason the market’s falling apart. Everyone’s been bracing for disaster and we’re clearly not getting it. And of course, it helps that economic data has been generally decent. Disclosure: Position in AAPL

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The Morning Hammer: Weak Oil Means Nothing to This Bull

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I’ve been out since last Thursday to get my eyeballs upgraded but not much has changed. When I’m not working, I make a point of not looking at the market or reading anything related to it. But I didn’t miss a thing. Crude oil is still deteriorating, yet SPX cracked yet another all-time high. The index has been consolidating in a remarkably tight range between 2160ish and 2180ish. I’ve been predicting that the market would head into a snoozefest like the one in April-May, and we’ve been getting it thus far. Futures are down slightly on weak earnings from Germany’s Commerzbank and a smaller-than-expected spending package from Japan which is sending the yen up. As you probably know, a strong yen means risk-off, though US markets have been yawning at everything including the kitchen sink. Sentiment is cooling off just a smidge. The ISE Sentimenmt Index fell to 72 yesterday and hasn’t been over 100 since July 18. That means call option demand is waning a bit, a good sign for the bulls because it means we’re still digesting and doubt is building. Pfizer (PFE) beat analysts’ expectations but is trading off slightly. We’re also seeing good numbers out of CVS (CVS), Procter & Gamble (PG), and Shire Plc. Watch closely to see how the pharma/biotech complex reacts. We’ve got some  big economic data points on tap today, with Personal Income/Spending and the PCE Deflator (the Fed’s preferred inflation measure) on the way. As of late, US economic data has been generally strong relative to expectations, though Friday’s GDP report was lousy. Check out the chart below of the Citi US Economic Surprise Index: I added the UK index just for the fun of it so you can see that the Brexit impact hasn’t been that bad so far: Now, what’s interesting is that the weak GDP numbers turned traders a little more dovish. Fed Funds futures now imply a 36% probability of a December rate hike, down from 48% last week. Strong economic data this morning could flip it back. As I’ve been emphasizing, perceptions of the Fed’s forward path are EXTREMELY volatile. Remember, after the Brexit, traders priced in a 9% chance of a December rate hike. And in less than a month, that number was up to 50%. So if you’re trading bonds, golds, forex, or anything else that’s rate-sensitive, you may be in for quite a ride. Good luck friends.

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T3’s Take T3: Pop & Drop at the F.B. Corral!

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By Michael Comeau 1) Lucky 13 for Facebook Yesterday after the close, social media giant Facebook (FB) delivered a massive earnings beat, sending shares as high as $133.91 in extended trading, or up 8.6%. The company is seeing significant growth in mobile, higher revenue from Instagram, and improving user engagement metrics, Facebook’s huge numbers weren’t exactly a surprise, since the company had beaten Wall Street’s earnings estimates for 12 straight quarters, making yesterday lucky number 13. This set the stage for a sell-the-news reaction, and Facebook finished well off the highs at $125.00 up 1.4% on the day. However, Facebook shares are still doing incredibly well in 2016 with a 19.4% year-to-date gain. 2) Jeff Cooper on Facebook’s Exhaustion Signal This afternoon, my buddy Jeff Cooper issued an interesting take on Facebook’s weakness: FB is poised to leave a large-range Gilligan sell signal if it closes at/near session lows. This is an exhaustion signal marked by a gap up to a new 60 day high with a close at/near session lows. AAPL is a different pattern as its earning’s gap was not a gap to new 60 day highs or 52 week highs or all time highs as is the case with FB. My takeaway is that institutions are scale-up sellers on pops. Tomorrow we get the reaction to two other FANG stocks (AMZN and GOOGL). If they react similarly to FB or don’t blow out expectations, there may be nothing left on the table to prevent a slide. 3) Another Day, Another Grind Given that crude oil is a major drive of equity market sentiment, I’ve been a bit surprised at how well equities have held up in the face of oil’s near-20% decline off the highs. And again today, we saw oil decline sharply… and stocks basically rolled their eyes. The S&P 500 went nowhere for the second day in a row, finishing at 2170.06, up 0.2%. In fact, the S&P hasn’t made a 1% move since July 8. Facebook and Apple’s (AAPL) small gains today helped the Nasdaq outperform. Biotechnology led the decliners’ column today, with the S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) falling -0.5%. Energy stocks were down on oil’s decline, with oil service names showing notable dips. P.S. My partner in crime Kurt Capra is hosting a FREE trading webinar after the close on Tuesday, August 2, 2016. Click here to sign up

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Fed-Induced Breather or Run of the Mill Digestion?

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Global markets are flashing slightly red this morning despite yet another whopper of an earnings report from Facebook (FB). Facebook is around $130 and making new record highs, and I’m asking myself why I ever sold this stock. It’s especially impressive in the face of Twitter’s (TWTR) struggle to just meet its own guidance. NDX futures are slightly in the red, as are SPX futures. Overnight, Euro-area economic confidence beat expectations and German and Spanish unemployment declined. We’ve talked extensively about how post-Brexit data has been beating expectations, and the trend continues. Of course, this plays right into a conversation about the Fed because the Brexit has been a source of concern. Yesterday, the Fed said it is less worried about near-term economic risks, which wasn’t a total surprise given the aforementioned data trends. Some folks are attributing today’s little slump to the Fed’s little hawkish twist, but I’m not buying that for 2 reasons: 1) The dollar actually FELL and gold rose after the release of yesterday’s Fed statement, showing that traders still think the Fed’s going to move slowly. The perceived odds of a Fed rate hike have risen, but perhaps not enough just yet. The dollar and gold are also following through on yesterday’s moves. 2) We’ve come a long, long way. The SPX is up 166 handles from the post Brexit lows and the FTSE 100 is up even more on a percentage basis. (see chart) This little sideways grind feels more like run-of-the-mill digestion, which I think could continue. I see August as being similar to the April-May snoozefest that bankrupted hordes of aggressive put options buyers. SPX barely budged yesterday, but there were some positives below the surface. Tech (inspired by Apple’s (AAPL) big earnings report, biotech, and small caps al did quite well, even with another big drop in crude oil. Crude oil is an important driver of risk sentiment and fundamentals (it heavily impacts earnings and high-yield energy bonds), so I’m a bit puzzled at how the market yawned at a near-20% drop in WTI crude. The big question I’m asking now is whether the good news we’re getting (solid economic data, huge earnings from AAPL and FB) is coming just in time for a short-term top. In my mind, price leads news (or as Mr. Jeff Cooper says, the news breaks with the cycles), so I’m wondering if this nice little streak of happy news is justifying all-time highs after the fact. We’ve got Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOGL) hitting after the close today. Should both of them beat, it will be interesting to see if that inspires real buying. For now, we still feel stretched and sentiment is positive, but you can’t argue with price — the bulls are holding strong. Good luck friends.

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T3’s Take 3: Apple Hulk-Smashes the Bears

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Want to start trading like a pro? Then click here. Trust me. By Michael Comeau 1) Apple Wins, Bears Cry As I wrote yesterday, expectations appeared to be very low heading into Apple’s (AAPL) Tuessday night earnings report. The numbers confirmed that suspicion as Apple reported better-than-expected revenues, earnings, and iPhone unit sales. The company also delivered very strong revenue guidance, which indicates that iPhone sales are holding up much better than the bears have expected. Apple shares ripped 6.6% to $103.03 today, helping to push the Nasdaq Composite and Nasdaq 100 indices to within striking distance of all-time highs. And let’s give Warren Buffett some credit — he disclosed his stake in Apple in mid-May when Apple hit its 2016 low. 2) The Bull Returns… Sort of Equity markets were a little odd today. Apple set off a rally in the Nasdaq and the widely-watched biotechnology was very strong, but the S&P 500 barely budged. The index fell -0.1% to 2066.58 — not exactly a barnburner! Oil prices and energy stocks slumped on higher-than-expected oil inventories, and we also saw weakness in utilities, real estate, consumer staples, and transports. Overall, the action felt like run-of-the-mill digestion, though with a clearly bullish tinge. If biotech makes another run like this tomorrow, we could see the S&P hitting new highs and the Nasdaq finally making its own new record. 3) Fed Schmed As expected, the Fed left rates unchanged today and issued a somewhat hawkish statement. The Fed said that employment data points to an increase in labor utilization, and that near-term risks to the economic outlook have diminished. Initially, gold fell and the dollar spiked, which are consistent with a more hawkish Fed. However, almost immediately, those moves reversed themselves and gold ended up 1.6% higher at $1,349/oz at the equity market close. And the dollar ended up at daily lows. Presumably, traders still believe the Fed will move very slowly as Fed Funds futures indicate that the next rate hike won’t happen until well into 2017.

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Twitter Is No Fun, Can’t Offer Proper Guidance

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I’ve been a long-time bear on Twitter (TWTR) and the company’s lousy quarter just reinforced the fact that it has 2 major problems: 1) User Experience As I’ve said before, unless you have a lot of followers, Twitter isn’t much fun. You  don’t get much engagement relative to platforms like Facebook (FB) and Instagram. Meanwhile, go out and find any teenager and ask them what platforms they’re focused on. They’ll say Snapchat and Instagram, which offer more engagement, are easier to use, and are just plain more fun than Twitter. Not everyone can come up with clever one-liners, but everyone can take a selfie or shoot a quick video. This has to change. Twitter has to become FUN to use. 2) Guidance I’m baffled by Twitter’s inability to set its guidance bar low enough to generate real beats. For Q2 (reported yesterday), Twitter guided for $600 million in revenues. At the time (4/26), that was 12% below street estimates. And Twitter only beat it by $2 million in revenue! In Q1, Twitter actually failed to hit its own guidance, even though its guidance was 5% below street expectations when issued. Any smart company offers guidance low enough to beat. So if Twitter can barely beat its guidance, it says 1 of 2 things: either they continually overestimate their own revenue momentum, or they need to take investor relations 101. Given that their CFO is a former high-profile Wall Street analyst, I think it’s the former. Now if Twitter can’t beat its guidance for Q3 — which implies just 7% revenue growth — we’re looking at a single-digit stock unless it gets taken over. Perspective We have to remember that at one point, Facebook (FB) — the undisputed king of social and perhaps the greatest digital ad platform the world has ever seen — was at one point down and out. So a turnaround can’t be completely counted out, assuming Twitter can drastically improve its user experience. (I don’t have faith myself) That’s the first step to getting the numbers to turn, though throughout history, I can’t remember a single successful turnaround of a social media platform. Friendster… nope. MySpace… nope. AOL… nope. Google+… nope. For now, this chart below tells you everything you need to know about Twitter: It plots the 2017 consensus revenue forecast (red line) against Twitter’s stock price since the IPO. This is a good illustration of the trend of growth expectations for the company. In early 2015, analysts expected over $5 billion in 2017 revenues. Now they’re forecasting under $3 billion. That red line needs to start going up. Soon.

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The Morning Hammer: Apple Smashes Bears, Record Nasdaq Highs in Sight

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Global markets are in a happy mood courtesy of Apple’s (AAPL) better-than-expected earnings report, and Japan’s signaling of more stimulus. Apple is up ~$6.50 in the early going after beating analysts’ earnings, revenue, and iPhone unit estimates, and offering strong forward guidance. Meanwhile, just as traders thought Bank of Japan stimulus was priced in (based on yesterday’s big rally in the yen), PM Shinzo Abe showed commitment to a $265 billion stimulus package. That’s pushing the yen back down, which is great for risk appetites. SPX futures are slightly green, while NDX futures are up 0.7%. If Apple generates some follow-through among other large-cap techs, we could see a new Nasdaq Composite all-time high above 5231.94. And the NDX may finally exceed its March 2000 high of 4816.35. Facebook (FB) reports after the close, and if it repeats another blowout, maybe we see those records fall by the weekend. In related news, Twitter (TWTR) dropped another guidance stink bomb last night and is getting smashed up. Meanwhile, Fiat Chrysler raised its forecast, and Comcast (CMCSA) and GlaskoSmithKline beat. Crude oil is down after the API showed a very small decline in crude oil inventories after the close yesterday. EIA data hits at 10:30 a.m. ET. Economists expect a 2 million barrel decline. We also have durable goods, pending home sales, and of course, the FOMC rate decision. Fed Funds futures show that traders are pricing in a mere 10% chance of a rate hike today. The forward outlook will be key. I would pay close attention to see if the Fed eases up on its concerns over the Brexit, given that global economic data has been generally strong as of late. Lately, I’ve been emphasizing that perception of the Fed, which impacts all financial markets, is incredibly volatile. Ths is especially true this year. 2 months ago, traders were pricing in a 74% chance of a December rate hike. That number dropped to 10% chance after the Brexit. Now those odds are back up to nearly 50%. And we act like Tesla (TSLA) is volatile… Now one thing I found really interesting yesterday was the action below the surface in biotech. IBB was red because of Gilead’s (GILD) weak earnings report and big decline. Yet XBI, which is much more diversified (GILD is 8% of IBB), was actually well in the green. So below the surface, biotech was strong (as was the Russell 2000) on an overall snoozer of the day. So pay close attention to biotech — if it turns out to be a coiled spring, the bulls might party like it’s 1999. And 1999 was a good year!

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Apple Eats Bears, Bears Eat Twitter

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1) Holding Ahead of Apple US markets entered a holding pattern ahead of Apple’s (AAPL) earnings report, which hit after the close today. (more on this below) The S&P 500 traded in an extremely tight range today before finishing at 2169.19, up a tiny 0.03% on the day. The Nasdaq and Russell 2000 indices showed solid outperformance today despite an intraday drop in oil and some biotech names. This was a bit of a surprise given that overseas markets indicated a risk-off posture in the early going, perhaps best exemplified by the sharp rise in the Japanese yen, which rallies when traders grow more cautious. Crude oil stayed weak, with WTI crude breaking the $43 handle, though energy stocks actually finished up. 2) Bio-Confusion Large cap biotechnology stocks took a tumble today after industry giant Gilead (GILD) reported disappointing second-quarter earnings results and poor guidance. Gilead, which accounts for 8% of the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB), fell -8.5% today, while IBB dipped -0.7% That wasn’t exactly a pretty picture, but outside of Gilead, biotechnology was actually pretty decent. The XBI ETF, which is much more diversified than IBB, was actually well in the green today. This indicates that many traders believe Gilead is facing company-specific problems that won’t impact the sector. 3) Post-Close Earnings Twitter (TWTR) beat analysts’ earnings estimates for the 6th quarter in a row, but it reported disappointing revenues and delivered atrocious third-quarter guidance. Many traders were surprised at Twitter’s dissappointment given the headline-heavy US election cycle and global geopolitical troubles, which should be driving significant news consumption and chatter via Twitter. Twitter shares were down sharply in extended trading. That’s not a surprise given that the stock just rose over 20% on takeover speculation. Meanwhile, Apple (AAPL) was up over 5% after-hours as the company beat Wall Street’s expectations for sales, earnings, and iPhone unit sales. Apple also offered strong forward guidance. This should mean good things for the Apple calendar spread trade I suggested today. And it may even be good for the Intel (INTC) calendar spread trade from last week if tech stocks get a lift.

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