1/ As SPX rips back to its highs, we see breadth deteriorating as the Mag7 are leading the charge once again.
2/ The options flows also back up this move as lots of calls were bought in the Mag7 names, which went deeply in the money and the CHARM effect of these options becoming 100 delta leads to more stock buying. Here is $MSFT 19Jan open interest, but looks the same for $NVDA, $AMZN, etc.
3/ $SPX dealers appeared to be long 19Jan options (4700-4800) as fixed strike vol kept getting offered and spot got bought back on every dip this week. The long GAMMA of these options meant that they had to cover short DELTA (a support that should be withdrawn today after OPEX).
4/ Meanwhile, behind the 19Jan expiry, the rest of the surface has been catching a bid. Fixed strike vol (31Jan-15Mar) since last Thursday is up huge! That is with SPX unchanged in the same timeframe although we did visit lows around 4720 this week. This tells us that $SPX option dealers are being taken shorter vol from flows and have less VEGA inventory.
5/ The obvious culprit was the massive VIX trade last Friday that bought 250k Feb24 17 calls and made the VVIX explode back higher. This has left the open interest in VIX calls very large in 14Feb and so a vol spike could get messy if we go there. SDEX has also popped which reflects more need for SPX protection as investors are still very long after chasing the Santa Rally.
6/ The sharp move higher yesterday was primarily driven by 0DTE call buying, especially in NDX which made new highs. This is not long term bullish flow, its speculative and technical.
7/ Sticking with technicals, we are seeing bearish momentum divergences across SPX and NDX and this often signals exhaustion and an imminent correction. De Mark sell signals are also flashing in certain Tech assets.
8/ "Window of Weakness" is open as our friend @jam_croissant mentions in this great summary so it makes sense to get some hedges in place, maybe out to March/April.
9/ Cycle analysis also suggests that a period of consolidation is likely according to our friend @CyclesGuyKuda who called last year's swings amazingly well with his robust seasonal analysis. open.substack.com/pub/kudachinha…
10 Whilst it's impossible to predict market swings with certainty, we can't help but notice a lot of stars aligning to suggest there is significant risk to an equity drawdown in the next 6-8 weeks. Crypto already pulled back 20% from its highs. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!
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Are options really that risky? Or do you just not know how to size them properly?
This is a common pushback I get from people about options, saying they are way too risky and you can lose all you money trading them.
A thread...
1/ The truth is, yes they can be risky if you don’t know what you’re doing.
If you know how to size them appropriately, then options can seriously enhance you risk-adjusted return profile and allow you to profit from multiple scenarios.
2/ Example 1 - How not to do it - YOLO
You want to speculate on a stock going up because it has a strong trend and the Santa rally is coming. So you buy a 1-week OTM call with 10% of your account capital.
A big week ahead with 3 central bank meetings and more mega-cap earnings reports. What is the vol market saying?
1/ SPX was up 0.69% last week (not a huge move) but fixed strike vol was higher, suggesting vol supply less abundant after OPEX and some more expectation of vol.
2/ VIX curve pretty flat despite higher SPX, showing 13 level acting as a floor for now. Spot up/Vol up isn;'t always bearish, but does spell some instability may be coming.
3/ VVIX still refuses to budge as the alligator jaws (vs VIX) look wide here. No doubt dealers are short VIX gamma.
0/ Nice to get my charts working again, some quick thoughts on crypto vol...
1/ The volatility carry in still pretty huge as the rally just can't seem to gain any speed. Implied vol, however has traded up along with the spot grind higher in anticipation of a move on CPI.
2/ These 2-3% moves on ETH just don't cut it when vol is still in the mid-50s. 25 vol differential between short term implied vol and realised vol looks very juicy. This amount of carry to harvest in the 89%-ile looks like we should quickly find front end sellers.
0DTE flows have dominated market action on recent macro event days.
Partly responsible for the bid on last month's weak CPI, but quickly faded as following day was FOMC.
Well, tomorrow could be another CPI miss, but w/no incoming FOMC to keep 0DTE speculators in check...☟
In this chart from @MorganStanley, you can see the CPI fixings market has done a pretty good job of predicting recent prints & expects downside miss tomorrow.
If fixings market is indeed correct, CPI miss could be the igniter that fuels another rip higher powered by 0DTE flows.
Looking at this data from @t1alpha shows that 0DTE flows absolutely dominated this past Monday, and wasn't even a big data day.
Last Friday's NFP saw 0DTE calls account for 60% of all call volume, fueling the rip as dealers scrambled to cover delta exposure.
Late last year, we noted that gold positioning had room to get longer as it was lagging behind the violent up-move in silver.
Well, things are now definitely getting interesting in gold - let's do a deep dive☟
You can see in these charts from @saxobank, @TDBank_US, & @BofA_Business, ETF holdings have had two consecutive weeks of inflows as central banks have been buying gold at the fastest clip in decades.
At the same time, you have CTA's forced into chasing the bullish momentum.
And now, with the dollar on the back foot, gold has decoupled from real yields and looks very stretched in the short term with some slight bearish momentum.
With this in mind, we like taking a contrarian view here, as everyone seems to be bullish right now.