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Strategies & Market Trends : Mr. Pink's Picks: selected event-driven value investments -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mr. Pink who wrote (10786)7/10/1999 9:17:00 AM
From: roddio  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18998
 
Mr. P!nk,

Perchance someday He will cast his all seeing eye northward to single out a Canadian turd ?



To: Mr. Pink who wrote (10786)7/10/1999 1:42:00 PM
From: Mad2  Respond to of 18998
 
From this weeks Barron's
interactive.wsj.com
What's this telling us? What does the future portend? Most importantly what profitable strategies can be employed going forward?
Best Regards,
Mad2
Summer of VIX
Options index hits a low and alarms sound

By Michael Santoli

A tropical swelter chokes a North American financial capital. The major stock-market indexes are flickering around all-time highs, sent aloft by an invincible U.S. economy and giddy expectations for heroic corporate earnings. The 30-year Treasury yield is hovering near 6%. Reflecting this carefree, day-at-the-beach mix of good cheer, the principal measure of fright in the options market -- the Chicago Board Options Exchange's Volatility Index -- lolls below the key 20 level.

Welcome to July 1998.

Toggle forward by one year to this past week, and you'll find the only significant difference in the scenario is that New York, and not Chicago, is the city that's been buckling under a nasty heat wave. And herein lies the warning, one that a number of market watchers were sounding amid the surface calm of last week: The market hit a peak July 17 of last year that it didn't revisit for four months, and only after sustaining a vicious descent of near-crash proportions.

The VIX, a measure of prices on Standard & Poor's 100 options and an indicator of the demand for downside protection, has been steadily falling from around 30 in late May and last week danced into the 19 range, having hit a recent low of 18.85 July 2. That retreat, combined with consistently heavy speculation in equity call options, has been enough to trip the complacency alarms for observers fond of contrary indicators.

Now, the meaning of the VIX is subject to myriad interpretations, just as entrails represent a forecast to some, a meal to others and simply an ugly mess to the rest of us. One factor, cited here recently, may be that the nearest-term index options, which are used to calculate the VIX, have been shunned by fund managers -- tired of watching their insurance evaporate worthless -- in favor of more distant contracts, whose prices have held up better.

There is also a school of thought that contends the absolute level of the VIX is less important than its trend, rising or falling. This school teaches that a descending VIX means the muscle cramps of fear are being massaged out of the market, improving its performance through rising stock prices. Only when the VIX bottoms and stalls -- and a chart reader might soon be able to make that case -- does it signal a bearish complacency.

Yet another camp will tell you that the VIX at these low levels may not be able to predict market direction, but signals the calm before a storm, meaning the market is poised for an explosive move in some direction. That would mean that strategies that profit from any kind of volatility, like buying a call and put at the same strike on the same stock, are well-advised.


As these debates percolate, the circumstantial evidence stands pretty clear. As Jay Shartsis' team at R.F. Lafferty noted last week, the previous three times since early 1998 that the VIX breached 20, stocks have either consolidated for a while or sold off. So anyone listening to the index-options market isn't waving the summer rally flag just yet. Granted, the indicator hasn't yet repeated the extreme lows below 17 of last July 17, but this July and the last are nonetheless starting to rhyme.



To: Mr. Pink who wrote (10786)7/12/1999 3:49:00 PM
From: Joe Copia  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18998
 
GCDV needs a major spanking. June 11 she was $0.08 and hit $10 today.

Har. Can you say un-kosher?