Options Report: Waiting for IBM Earns; Chasing Pfizer
April 20, 1998 2:32 PM By Steven M. Sears NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--International Business Machines' options are trading in an air of uncertainty in advance of the technology company's after-market earnings report.
Traders expect the company will beat the consensus first-quarter earnings number of $1.05 a share, but they are nervous about what happens after that.
The stock has made a good run in the past three weeks and is now about 3 1/2 points off its high of 113 1/2. The uncertainty comes from trying to anticipate if earnings will drive the stock higher or instigate profit taking.
Some traders are buying out-of-the money calls to position themselves for a drive back into record territory. Other traders are buying puts to either protect their stock or to make a buck if the stock price goes down.
"People are putting some bets down," an IBM options trader at the Chicago Board Options Exchange said. "What I'm hearing is that they are looking for earnings to be somewhat higher, maybe not significantly higher. But people are looking at the action of the stock over the past three weeks."
The most active calls include the May 110 and 115 contracts which have traded 6,218 and 6,608 contracts, respectively. The most active puts include the May 100, 105 and 110 puts, which have traded 2,899, 3,763 and 3,250 contracts, respectively. IBM's options are the second most actively traded contracts in the market. Almost 36,000 contracts have traded. The stock is up 2 1/8 at 109 7/8.
The most actively traded options are Pfizer's.
Pfizer's impotence drug is turning the pharmaceutical company's options into go-go contracts. Institutional traders sold the contracts Friday because they thought the stock's 4 1/2 point gain that session was the final expression of a price surge.
"They thought that was the move," a Pfizer options trader said.
But Monday, traders and a horde of retail traders are buying into the stock's 6 3/4 point gain that has Pfizer trading at 112 3/8 on heavy volume. Some traders are covering positions, too. The stock is trading at 111 15/16, off slighlty from its intraday high of 112 5/16.
Trading is being driven by media coverage of Viagra. The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Viagra is one of the fastest-selling drugs in the history of medicine. The article cited market sources said doctors are writing tens of thousands of prescriptions each day.
So far, more than 41,000 Pfizer options have traded, compared with almost 61,000 contracts Friday, most of which were on the sell-side.
The size of the average trade Monday is 20 contracts, the Pfizer trader said. Trades for less than 100 contracts generally indicate retail traders.
Active Pfizer calls include the May 105, 110 and 115 calls, which have traded 4,169, 4,517 and 2,023 contracts, respectively. -Steven M. Sears; 201-938-5355 |