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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Julius Wong who wrote (165615)11/30/2020 7:20:24 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219469
 
going to require some care,

as am totally balanced between short and long calls, with the longs of longer duration than the shorts they are matched to, and w/ nearer expirations at long 600 short 700 / 760, and further-away expiries at long 600 / 700, and short 800

need to disposed of the longs before time-decay takes over, but must hold on to the shorts even as the RobinHooders approaches. Should be do-able as the shorts are in front of the longs in expiries.

Besides the above campaign, have also to keep in mind to short periodic tranches to feed the RobinHooders so as to better feed brood and self.

Ideally, TSLA (X)

ramps to 600 < X < 700 by December 11 (short 700s expire worthless),
ramps to 700 < X < 760 by December 18 (short 760s expire worthless),

stays elevated at ~750 - 790 until December 31 (unload December 31st & January 15th long 700s sometime between 11th and 31st)

gently give back ground to 550-750 thereafter (unload long Feb-700s & Mar-600s, and watch the Jan/Feb/Mar short-800s turn to dust)

The volatility matters a bit, but pricing more.

Please let RobinHooders know :0)

Should the up-then-down be more intense and happen w/I shorter window, just means I need to dance w/ more agility to the tune and do what I wished to otherwise do at more leisurely pace.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (165615)12/1/2020 12:36:36 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219469
 
Re <<Tesla>>

Some throw-around numbers for the gift that keeps on giving

Given the numbers I suspect Tesla shall rise into and through year-end

ft.com

Tesla to join S&P 500 in one swoop

Index provider had considered addition in intervals given carmaker’s hefty market capitalisation

6 hours ago
Tesla, founded by Elon Musk, will join the S&P 500 on December 21 © AFP via Getty ImagesTesla will enter the S&P 500 next month in one swoop, reflecting confidence that Wall Street traders will be able to handle a record arrival to the index followed by trillions of dollars of passive investment funds.

S&P Dow Jones Indices announced the decision late on Monday, after previously considering staggering the electric carmaker’s introduction to America’s blue-chip stock index.

The inclusion of Tesla ranks as the biggest on record and will give the company one of the largest weightings in the S&P 500, prompting the index provider to ask market participants this month whether the addition should occur in two stages.

In a statement on Monday, the index said “it will add Tesla to the S&P 500 at its full float-adjusted market capitalisation weight” before trading opens on Monday, December 21.

“In its decision, S&P DJI considered the wide range of responses it received, as well as, among other factors, the expected liquidity of Tesla and the market’s ability to accommodate significant trading volumes on this date.”

Wall Street estimates project up to $100bn of demand for Tesla shares from exchange trade funds and money managers that track and use the S&P 500 as a performance benchmark. In total, $11.2tn of investment fund assets are linked to the S&P 500.

Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P DJI, said the carmaker’s “current market value (adjusted for float), of $437bn, would produce $72.7bn in required trades, in addition to the normal rebalancing trades” on the day of its inclusion.

That would dwarf the normal activity required when the S&P 500 is reshuffled. The last 20 rebalancing days had an average of $27.1bn in trades, Mr Silverblatt calculated, with a record of $50.8bn set in September 2018.

Passive investment vehicles such as ETFs are focused on securing their slice of Tesla at its closing price on December 18 to minimise a metric known as tracking error. When companies are added or removed from a benchmark, ETFs adjust their holdings in tandem, seeking to mirror the index as closely as possible and at the lowest cost possible.

RecommendedA number of market makers believe there is sufficient liquidity to facilitate an orderly rebalancing of the S&P 500 next month in spite of Tesla’s hefty market weighting.

The carmaker’s shares have surged 40 per cent in the two weeks since S&P DJI announced its addition to the S&P 500, setting an intraday record of $607.80 early on Monday before easing to close at $565.74.

This year, Tesla has gained 600 per cent, giving it a market capitalisation of $535bn, after solidifying founder Elon Musk’s effort to bring electric vehicles into the mainstream and dramatically improving its underlying financial performance.

After the market closes on December 11, S&P DJI will announce the name of the company being replaced by Tesla.

Sent from my iPhone



To: Julius Wong who wrote (165615)12/1/2020 2:16:11 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219469
 
If I were forced to place BTC, I would group it together w/ TSLA and tulips, however I am unable to prove that I would not be wrong

bloomberg.com

Bitcoin Is the Tulipmania That Refuses to Die

The speculative frenzy for the best-known cryptocurrency keeps on coming back for more.

John Authers
1 December 2020, 13:07 GMT+8


Prettier, but more perishable than digital assets.

Photographer: Carsten Koall/Getty Images

To get John Authers' newsletter delivered directly to your inbox, sign up here.

Landmark MondayThere is no particular reason why we should care about records and round numbers in the markets. They just play to human heuristics; mental shortcuts. But we plainly do care about them, so here is a roundup of a landmark-strewn passage of trade.

Bitcoin

The first and best-known cryptocurrency set a record high Monday, and came close to topping $20,000 for the first time. It is three years since its last peak, in December 2017, which followed a frantic binge of speculation. After the previous big spike, in late 2013, it also took about three years for the cryptocurrency to make a new high. Amid ridiculous volatility, some patterns are emerging. Bitcoin continues to make money for those with the gall and timing to take advantage. Buy at its 2013 peak and sell at the 2017 peak, and you would have compounded at more than 100% per year. The same is true if you had bought at its recent low in 2018:



Back in 2017, I enjoyed writing a long essay on the similarities between bitcoin and tulip bulbs. Tulips, I averred, are at least rather pretty. But the great Dutch tulipmania collapsed in a heap and never returned. The bitcoin phenomenon is plainly different as it keeps coming back for more, between tulip-like doses of excess.

Following 2013, much money was poured into ways to use the new technology, and new tokens and cryptocurrencies arrived on the scene. Many were more or less blatant scams. But there was a sense, rather like the laser in an earlier generation, of a solution in search of a problem; now, people are finding problems to solve with it.

Bitcoin is used more, and should gain in value from network effects. It continues to have appeal for anyone who wants to bet that central banks will debase fiat currencies. And some big institutions, desperate for anything that might produce a return in current conditions, are beginning to dabble in it. The problems with it remain: Bitcoin has no intrinsic value, and governments may fight hard to keep their monopoly over issuing currency. But for the time being bitcoin is showing some signs of growing maturity as an asset class — and it has endured far longer now than the average tulip.

Remember, Remember November

As many have pointed out, the month just passed was a stellar one for stock markets. The following chart shows the S&P 500 and FTSE’s index for the rest of the world, both rebased to 100 at the end of October. Both gained more than 10%.



Double figure returns for a month are rare. They happened in April this year, during the post-Covid rebound, but never in the rebound from the global financial crisis. There was a double-figure month in October 2011, as the market recovered from the shock of the U.S. Treasury downgrade; another in December 1991 (investors were excited about what was predicted to be a speedy recovery from the recession of that year, which had come with Operation Desert Storm, and were also relieved that the Soviet Union was about to wind itself up without bloodshed); and in January 1987 (Black Monday lay ahead). Such months used to be more common, and I found three during the early years of the Reagan bull market: August and October 1982, and August 1984.

November was actually more impressive outside the U.S. Dredging through the terminal, November seems to have been the best calendar month on record for the FTSE’s rest of the world index, and for the MSCI EAFE index, which covers the developed world outside the U.S. and gained 15.4% in dollar terms. That’s a heck of a lot for one calendar month.

How much does it matter? There is no particular reason for markets to overlap with the dictates of the calendar. As the chart shows, November’s remarkable performance owes much to the coincidence that a selloff ended on the last day of October. The S&P 500’s level compared to its previous peak in September is nothing like as exciting.

Valuation

This week will also see an anniversary. Alan Greenspan made his famous warning about “irrational exuberance” in the stock market on Dec. 5, 1996. The intervening 24 years have flown by. This prompts some more worrying signals about today.

The former Federal Reserve chairman was famously right about the irrationality, but got his timing badly wrong. The bull market would rage on, and form a bubble, for three more years after that speech (in part because Greenspan lost his zeal for puncturing the excess). The following chart shows the price-sales and price-forward earnings multiples (as calculated by Bloomberg) for the S&P 500, starting at the point of his speech. Both rose far further in the next three years, before spending the better part of a decade below their level of December 1996 once the internet bubble had burst.

Now, thoroughly alarmingly, the P/E ratio is almost as high as it was at the dot-com peak, while the sales multiple is at a record. This is at a point where vaccines have still not been cleared for use, and the Covid pandemic continues to subject most of us in the Western world to lifestyles that cramp economic activity.



With only one exception, it’s hard to see any justification to pay more for stocks now than in December 1996 (when all appeared set fair for years into the future). The exception is important. Bond yields are far lower than they were back then.

Yale University professor Robert Shiller literally wrote the book on irrational exuberance. His bestseller of that name included a methodology for valuing stock markets using his cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratio, or CAPE. This takes a multiple of average earnings over the previous 10 years, and thus corrects for the market’s tendency to take account of the economic cycle, with lower P/Es when earnings are expected to fall and higher ones when they are expected to rise. Shiller continues to update his measure of the S&P’s CAPE, but he always publishes it on a chart that also shows long-term interest rates. This is the latest update, compiled at the close of trading immediately before Thanksgiving:



Stock valuations are slightly higher than they were on the eve of the Great Crash of 1929, which is a landmark devoutly not to be wished. Since the dot-com bubble burst, valuations have only once been higher than they are now, and that was in January 2018, immediately before a nasty correction. This is what the CAPE looks like since Greenspan’s speech:



On the bright side, rates are considerably lower than they have ever been at any point in the 140 years that Shiller tracked for his research. Plainly, borrowing costs so low mean that future earnings should be discounted at a lower rate, and corporate valuations should be higher. But how much higher?

Running the numbers from Shiller’s spreadsheet, I found that the average CAPE over history has been 17.1, barely half the current 33.1. The average 10-year yield has been 4.52% (the late 1970s and early 1980s were a huge exception to the historical norm), whereas it is now at 0.88%. Conceivably, low rates justify earnings multiples at this level, but it isn’t pleasant to think about what would happen to share prices if bond yields ever made a significant and sustained rise. The market corrections of 2013 (during the Taper Tantrum) and of early and late 2018 were all driven by the fear of rising rates ahead.

Current U.S. stock market valuations may not be irrationally exuberant, then, but they take a lot of good news for granted, and they also assume a complaisant bond market.

Up to a Point, Lord Copper

Finally, another landmark sees the price of copper reach its highest level in seven years. Most intriguingly, this has been combined with a dive in the price of gold, which has suffered a 13% correction over the last two months. Put those together and you have a startling rise in the copper/gold ratio, a classic sign of optimism about economic growth:



November’s rise, at a point when much of the world economy still languishes, is if anything even more extraordinary than the advance in the stock market. It doesn’t owe anything to the vagaries of the calendar.

However, it is only four years since the copper/gold ratio last had a month this good. And November 2016 was also a U.S. presidential election month. In both cases, the narratives around the election (to borrow another concept from Shiller), were swiftly turned into reasons for optimism.

Back in 2016, the story was that an incoming President Trump would be good for growth, cutting tax, deregulating and priming the pump with infrastructure investment. This would at last jolt the world out of years driven solely by monetary policy. This November, the story is that an incoming President Biden will be good for growth, rebuilding trade, priming the pump with infrastructure investment, and using his Treasury secretary, the mightily respected Janet Yellen, to help rebuild the U.S. labor market.

True, the vaccine is also a major factor this time. But it is striking that a fundamental indicator, driven by demand for very different metals, seems to have been sparked into life equally by both the victory and the defeat of Donald Trump.

Survival TipsAs the winter nights close in, there will be more time for streaming video. If you hunger for high culture, note that New York’s Metropolitan Opera is livestreaming an opera every night this week. Each will be available for 23 hours. Tuesday’s offering will be Verdi’s Aida, in a production I once saw. My strongest memory is of the Egyptian parade that crossed the stage, including live camels. For glorious operatic treatment, it should be hard to beat. Treats ahead for the week include Carmen, and Puccini’s Tosca, featuring Pavarotti. It might be worth making an event out of it, and pretending you’re in an opera house, not your living room.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
John Authers at jauthers@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Matthew Brooker at mbrooker1@bloomberg.net

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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To: Julius Wong who wrote (165615)12/1/2020 7:21:59 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219469
 
Nothing like bitcoin to kick off a trading session

bloomberg.com

What Bitcoin's New Record Means For Wall Street

It’s not an existential threat to the banking system, but a spur toward a post-Covid digital payments future.

Lionel Laurent
December 1, 2020, 4:00 PM GMT+8



Taking a page from the gold rush.

Photographer: Ulrich Baumgarten/Getty Images

Bitcoin’s true believers are taking a victory lap after the cryptocurrency’s fresh all-time high of almost $20,000. “Onward and upward we go to the moon!” tweeted Tyler Winklevoss. “All governments, [financial services] and corporations will soon be mining Bitcoin to guarantee their own supply,” echoed Bitcoin advocate Charlie Shrem. That appears to be true of the Venezuelan army, at least.

But is this new record going to convert an often-skeptical financial sector, at least beyond hedge funds and strategists who see Bitcoin as a Covid-19 safehaven? Not everyone is convinced.

Last month, as the cryptocurrency hit $18,000 for the first time since 2018, Jamie Dimon at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said he hadn’t changed his mind since he called Bitcoin a fraud during its 2017 bubble. “We’re a believer in cryptocurrency, properly regulated and properly backed,” he said, adding, “Bitcoin’s kind of different, and that’s not my cup of tea.”



A Message for Wall StreetBut, as bitcoin enthusiasm takes off yet again, are bankers really listening?

Source: Bloomberg

Note: x axis denotes calendar week

Dimon’s stance ultimately reflects the mood inside bulge-bracket banks that have been dipping their toes in crypto waters. Forged during the 2008 financial crisis as an artificially scarce, cryptographically secure way to bypass traditional finance, Bitcoin won’t be viewed as an existential threat to the banking system just because its price is soaring. But it won’t be ignored either. Rather it will be seen as a spur toward a more digital, regulator-friendly post-Covid payments future.

We’ve seen big banks seek to make money from Bitcoin without handling it directly, reflecting fairly limited client demand and a lack of regulatory clarity. That’s still the preferred option. Morgan Stanley began clearing cash-settled Bitcoin futures in 2018, while JPMorgan this year adopted crypto exchanges Coinbase Inc. and the Winklevoss twins’ Gemini Trust Co. as corporate-banking clients.

Bolder proposals such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s bid to open a crypto trading desk never really got anywhere. The long list of risks highlighted by the Bank for International Settlements, from money laundering and terrorist finance to reputation, might have something to do with it. A survey of financial assets between 2010 and 2019 on the Bank of England’s staff blog found that Bitcoin’s market downside risk was 44%, steeper than stocks or gold.

None of this would normally be insurmountable for bankers when there’s real money to be made. But even with serious sums changing hands on crypto exchanges, and funds such as Guggenheim Partners LLC eyeing Bitcoin, the proverbial phone still isn’t ringing off the hook.

Even parts of the banking sector willing to go further know they need regulators on board. Singapore’s DBS Group Holdings Ltd. is planning to run its own digital currency exchange for qualified investors, but only once it receives regulatory approval. There’s certainly more oversight in 2020 than there was in 2017: European Union anti-money laundering rules now extend to crypto exchanges, and U.S. regulators allow banks to offer cryptocurrency custodian services. Still, European Central Bank boss Christine Lagarde this week reiterated Bitcoin and its ilk were “highly volatile, illiquid and speculative.”

The bigger question for Wall Street banks therefore isn’t Bitcoin itself but what comes next, especially since its clunky flaws as a method of payment are well-known. Central banks and private companies alike are scrambling to hit upon a mass-market alternative that might fix them. That might involve central bank-issued tokens like a digital euro, which is at least five years away, or a privately issued coin like Libra, which may be just one monthaway. Banks’ business models might be vulnerable.

For JPMorgan, it makes sense to pursue blockchain ideas like JPM Coin that could save money for banks in payments. The advantage isn’t just potential cost savings, but also attracting smart tech talent, as seen by LVMH executive Ian Rogers’s move to crypto hardware startup Ledger.

Lenders have no choice if they want to compete with digital rivals out to eat their lunch. Paypal Holdings Inc.’s recent foray into Bitcoin is part of a broader fintech push with apps like Venmo. The firm is also speaking to regulators about digital wallets. In a post-pandemic world of low rates and rising defaults, banks are worried about the tech crowd. After all, in the euro zone non-banks overtook traditional banks’ market share of deposit-taking and lending in 2018, according to the Centre for Economic Policy Research.

Crypto may be making a comeback after a long winter, but when it comes to Bitcoin, bankers can afford to hibernate a little longer. Staying one step removed, by offering banking services to money-spinning exchanges or facilitating futures trades, is the equivalent of selling pickaxes and shovels during the gold rush. Dimon’s right to hold back.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Lionel Laurent at llaurent2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Melissa Pozsgay at mpozsgay@bloomberg.net

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (165615)12/1/2020 5:00:39 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219469
 
Following up to Message 33067457 Tesla (TSLA) campaign, and so starts the dangerously delicate operation to untangle good value from toxic cr@p

Sold 20% of the Long TSLA December 31st Call strike-700 at 170% gain, and leaving rest of longs (green) and shorts (red) in dangerous place, the wagering table. Ideally pull out the green and let the red rot, without getting a call on stuff I do not have but promised to deliver.

Am now, option-count net short TSLA.


Of the entire order of battle, the center of gravity is between long Call February strike-700 and long Call March strike-600, w/ the short calls evenly distributed across the entire time axis between 11th December to 19th March, such that de-risking happens faster on the short side by way of time-decay.

Very exciting, and if done right, completes the work for 2021 before the bottom possibly falls out of the market by perhaps late-March to mid-April, a wild guess, on this side of May. Anyhow, that be the working premise.