Trading range ahead?
  <Contrarian indicator says the oil rally is over                                            Fri, May  8, 2015, 11:52AM EDT
                                                               .                                                                                                                                                                Goldman's options research desk says that the energy rally has come to an end. But Susquehanna's derivative expert disagrees.                                                     Energy stocks have slid  in the past three sessions, after a big bounce since mid-March, and the  options market could be throwing off signs that the comeback is over for  good.
  In a recent  note to clients, Goldman Sachs' options research team wrote that "We  recently changed our view from bullish to bearish on energy as option  markets show extreme complacency following the sharp rally in the energy  complex over the past six weeks." 
     Specifically, Goldman found that the prices of bearish put options  have fallen considerably, indicating that investors see diminished risk  of downside as traders have become far more optimistic. But for Goldman,  that's a clear sign that the energy rally has run out of steam.
     "We find options have been a powerful contrarian indicator over the  past year," and once again, it will pay to look the direction that the  market isn't looking, the analysts concluded. 
  Yet Susquehanna head of derivative strategy Stacey Gilbert says that it's only logical that options prices have fallen.
   			                  59.56+1.39(2.39%) 			               			        NYSE10:48AM EST 			      			 
                               "There is a sense of complacency, but let's put the complacency into context," Gilbert said in a Thursday "   Trading Nation "  segment. "The volatility was substantially higher if you go back over  the past six months compared to where it's pricing everything now...  [but] the question becomes, are we having the same type of movement that  we've had over the past six weeks?"
    "If you're not expecting that type of movement, volatility should be lower," she added.
     Gilbert says the options market is predicting that crude oil will  remain range-bound between $50 and $70, rather than continuing to make  massive moves, although implied volatility is still elevated versus  recent historical averages. 
  But  to Gilbert, just because the options market is pricing in smaller  swings over the next few months than the gargantuan ones the energy  market has experienced over the last few months, that doesn't mean that  energy stocks are set to sink.
     Disclosure: Gilbert holds a bullish options position on the Market Vectors Oil Services ETF (OIH)   (NYSE Arca: OIH).>
  http://finance.yahoo.com/news/contrarian-indicator-says-oil-rally-100000811.html
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