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To: straight life who wrote (15956)10/4/1998 3:59:00 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
To all - more stuff to confuse and cloud the thinking of all "chicken littles" out there :

("lifted" from Barrons)

October 5, 1998



Be Very Afraid

Which may be bullish, but short-term only

By Jay Shartsis

A number of years ago there was a very funny movie called Where's Poppa? in
which George Segal played a guy who was unable to say the word "home," as in
"putting his mother in a nursing home." A similar condition has apparently afflicted
numerous market commentators who can't seem to utter the word "down,"
coming no closer than the non-threatening "volatility," as in "we expect continued
volatility in the market." I guess they're afraid of causing a panic and being sued.

At any rate, the bummer this summer "volatized" about 50% off the average
Nasdaq stock and nearly 40% from counterparts on the NYSE, according to
research from John Manley, Equity Strategist at Salomon Smith Barney. Carnage
of such magnitude would seem to make any further debate about the existence of
a bear market downright silly.

In fact, these losses are on a par with what history identifies as the Great Crash of
1929 -- which culminated in Black Thursday, October 29, of that fateful year. The
damage in that first leg down was 44.7% as measured by the S&P (there was no
Nasdaq until 1971). Not so well known is the fact that the market put together a
very big rally after the crash, gaining 46.8% as measured by the S&P, in a
five-month recovery that ran into March of 1930. After that the real toboggan ride
would start, and by June 1932 the damage was a mind-numbing 86.2%.

The question arises as to whether the
market is now in a condition similar to
that of November 1929 and ready for a
substantial rally -- even if the world is
coming to an end later.

Larry McMillan, editor of the Option
Strategist, presents several indicators
which suggest that the path of least
resistance for stocks is now upward.
First he notes that the VIX, the Chicago
Board Options Exchange volatility index,
reached very high levels, peaking on
August 31 before recently receding.
That reflected puts on the S&P 100
being bid way up as fear gripped
traders. High fear equals market bottom. Of special interest is the fact that the
VIX stayed high for a few weeks, not just a one- or two-day spike, and this might
be extra bullish.

McMillan next points to the important equity put/call ratio, which soared to levels
of put trading not seen since the 1987 collapse. Intriguingly, he thinks that back in
the 1980s this ratio might have been inflated by reversal and conversion arbitrage,
"a strategy which is no longer prevalent." He concludes: "Today's readings at 60%
might be the highest purely speculative readings in history, although there's no
way of confirming that."

Another example of traders turning "too bearish" is found in the very high levels of
put trading for S&P 500 futures options. Place this in the bullish column too, says
McMillan.

To take advantage of the elevated VIX, Tom Gentile, chief options strategist for
Optionetics in San Mateo, California, suggests selling credit spreads which "offer
good risk/rewards as option premiums tend to revert to their averages."

Mike Oyster of Schaeffer's Investment Research feels that "anyone who dumps
their long-term stock positions now will end up kicking themselves in six to 12
months after stocks have recovered and moved into new-high territory." This he
concludes because option indicators "are illustrating runaway fear" which will
ultimately show that "current levels represent a historic buying opportunity."

Specifically, Oyster cites the 10-day moving average of the CBOE equity put/call
ratio, which reached the extraordinarily high level of .72 on September 3 and .71
on September 10. "These are by far the highest readings of the 1990s," he says.

Mike allows that a certain amount of pessimism can be expected as the market
pulls back but that the "extremely extreme" readings recorded of late suggest that
"stocks are a great buy even though there is a slight risk of further downside
moves in the short term."

I don't want to push the 1929 scenario too far. Still, comparisons may prove
useful. After the October Crash in 1929, a month long rally ensued, much like the
one we just witnessed in September. Then a successful test of the lows took place
before the rally resumed. If history is repeating, the scary market plunge last week
should prove to be the good buying spot implied by the option indicators herein.

JAY SHARTSIS is director of option trading at R.F. Lafferty & Co. in New York.


Copyright © 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.