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Sunday, December 22, 2024

Option trader predicts natural gas set to rally into next heating season

Today’s tickers: UNG, HIG, XLF, XRT, CLF, WFMI & VRTX

UNG– Shares of the natural gas fund have rallied by more than 1% to stand at $16.66. We observed some bullish call buying on the ETF by one investor looking for natural gas prices to heat up as we head into the beginning of ‘heating season’ in October. It appears that this individual looked to the October 20 strike price and purchased 26,000 calls for an average premium of 1.45 apiece. The 31,000 call options traded at the October 20 strike today is more than five times the existing open interest at the strike of just 6,834 lots. With a breakeven point of $21.45 on the trade, the investor is hoping to see shares of UNG rally by a minimum of 29% from the current price so he may begin to garner profits to the upside. – United States Natural Gas ETF

HIG– Investors in the insurance and financial services firm have witnessed HIG’s shares surge more than 21% today to the current price of $15.23. While a mass of more than 120,000 option contracts exchanged hands on the stock throughout the trading day, our attention was drawn to a couple of bullish plays. Traders who expect the stock to retain gains into next month looked to the June 16 strike price and purchased some 4,000 calls for an average premium of 1.20 each. Investors will breakeven at a price of $17.20 by expiration. Uber-bullishness was observed at the September 25 strike where about 4,400 calls appear to have been purchased for a premium of 91 cents per contract. These call-buyers have thrown a Hail Mary pass today, but they will have to wait to see whether it will be received in the end zone or whether it will fall short by expiration. To profit from the long-call position, shares will need to rally with a vengeance by about 70% through the breakeven point at $25.91. Option implied volatility has climbed throughout the week from 112% on Monday to the current reading of 144%. – Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.

XLF– The financials ETF, a daily presence on our ‘most active by options volume’ market scanner, has enjoyed a more than 3.5% rally to $11.80 amid broad gains enjoyed by financial firms today. While more than 250,000 option contracts were traded on the fund, we focused in on one trade in particular in the January 2010 contract. A sold strangle was established by one investor via the sale of 10,000 puts at the January 8.0 strike price for 67 cents each and the sale of 10,000 calls at the January 17 strike for a premium of 46 cents apiece. Although there is no such thing as a 100% ‘safe play’ in the game called investing, the strangle described above comes pretty close to fool proof. The investor reels in a modest premium of 1.13, but is likely to retain the entire amount because shares would need to swing outside of the breakeven points located at $18.13 to the upside and at $6.87 to the downside before facing losses in either direction at expiration. This individual has illustrated the benefits of utilizing options as he has taken advantage of eight months of time value as well as the decline in volatility today from 68% to the current reading of 59%. – Financial Select Sector SPDR

XRT – Shares of the retail ETF were off slightly early in the trading day, but have since rallied by more than 1% to $25.84 despite the 3.1% decline year over year in retail sales (excluding autos and gasoline). Sales have fallen for the second month in a row with April’s shift downward of about 0.4% following the worse-than-expected 1.3% drop observed in March. Some option traders were seen bracing themselves for continued bearish movement in the fund as more than 30,000 puts look to have been purchased at the September 20 strike price for an average premium of 98 cents apiece. Such positioning suggests significant pessimism as those individuals long of puts at that strike begin to profit to the downside at a breakeven price of $19.02 by expiration. In order for profits to be realized, shares of the XRT would need to erode by about 26% from the current price over the next 4 months. In stark contrast one investor was seen looking for significant near-term gains in the ETF. The contrarian trade involved the sale of 7,500 puts at the June 24 strike price for 85 cents each spread against the purchase of 7,500 calls at the June 29 strike for 35 cents. The bullish individual enjoys a 50 cent credit on the trade and is looking for shares to rally by at least 12% so that the June 29 calls may land in-the-money by expiration next month. – Retail Select Sector SPDR

CLF – The trials and tribulations of the commodity boom-and-bust cycle have certainly weighed heavily at CLF. The iron-ore pellet producer recently said it lost money in the first quarter and yesterday announced measures to save money after it unveiled pollution penalties. While shareholders saw their investments slide as its shares fell, they were served a double does of bad news with a capital-preserving dividend cut, while employees and directors saw their benefits slashed. The final straw was the offering of 15 million common shares priced at $21.00. Last week its shares were trading at $32.12. Today shares of CLF have fallen more than 8% to $21.30. A June strangle at the 21.0 strike indicates that one trader expects the shares to remain on an even keel over the next month but sees them locked between $15.83 and $26.17. The trade involved the sale of 3,000 calls and puts at the strike to rake in a 5.17 premium. Another investor expects the depression to be gone by the fall and sold an October strangle selling 1,200 puts at the October 25 strike and sold 1,200 calls at the October 35. This individual rakes in 8.56 and is looking for shares to remain ‘strangled’ by the strike prices described. The opportunity to play on such a hefty premium was brought about by a rise in the option implied volatility on the stock, which has been on the rise since last Friday’s reading of 85% to today’s high of 103%. The sold straddle and strangle strategies may prove profitable to the responsible traders if volatility comes off and allows them to buy back the short positions for less than they initially paid. – Cliffs Natural Resources Inc.

WFMI – Investors rallied around Whole Foods heading into yesterday’s earnings report, which in the event revealed that the Texas-based provider of natural and organic foods was successful in promoting its lower-priced lines as well as reining in its cost structure. After coinciding its results with a lousy retail sales report, its shares languished. Today there is a sense of stability with shares up 1.4% to $20.28. However, a post-earnings slide in options implied volatility is encouraging investors to buy into downside protection as they pay heavily eroded put premiums at the May 20 strike. At just 35 cents per contract protective put option buyers are paying 70% less than yesterday’s premium. Elsewhere the June 20 strike, which has fallen by 27% in value on the day, is seeing most activity with 8,444 contracts in play so far today. The premium implies a down move for Whole Foods through expiration to $18.45. On the call side the heaviest-trafficked contract is at the may 23 strike where sellers have dictated the activity as they unwind around 3,000 lots for a mere 3 cent premium. Volatility has subsided from 87 to 64% today. – Whole Foods Market Inc.

VRTX – Shares of the pharmaceuticals firm have rallied by about 0.5% today to $29.13 amid speculation reported by one news source that VRTX may have agreed to be acquired by Britain’s GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). In line with the unconfirmed takeover rumors, we observed traders getting long of call options in the June contract. The June 35 strike price saw more than 6,000 calls bought for an average premium of 59 cents apiece. Such a stance requires that the stock receive more than the doctor-prescribed dose of bullishness in order for investors to profit by expiration next month. Activity in the options market suggests a substantial premium to any buyout price as shares would need to gain 22% in order to breach the breakeven point on the calls at $35.59. Option implied volatility on the stock jumped up to 64% this morning but has since tapered off to the current reading of 59% in line with yesterday’s closing value. – Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

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