New Trade $XHB: After A Decent Cover On Friday, Rolling Out Bearish View

by Dan April 9, 2013 12:56 pm • Commentary

After a decent trade repair by rolling up my strikes a couple weeks ago (read below), and then taking profits on the position after Friday’s down opening, I am now going to roll this bearish view out to May with the ETF up nearly 4% in a little more than 3 trading days.  The 6 month chart shows the importance of the 29.50 area as resistance, since it’s where the 20 day moving average and the previous resistance from Jan and Feb both come into play:

6 month chart of XHB, courtesy of Bloomberg
6 month chart of XHB, courtesy of Bloomberg

XHB reached that area, and now I want to play for a move back to near 28.  

TRADE: XHB ($29.33) Sold the May 28 / 30 Call Spread at $1.17

-Sold 1 May 28 Call at 1.71

-Bought 1 May 30 Call for .54

Break-Even on May Expiration:

-Profits of up to 1.17 between 28 and 29.17, max profit of 1.17 at 28 or below

-Losses up to 0.83 between 29.17 and 30, max loss of 0.83 at 30 or above

Trade Rationale:  With macro realized volatility in the broader market still low, we are wary of doing more out-of-the-money put spread trades, but we still want a clean way to get short delta, so this is the structure that should make nice profits on a quick move lower, but won’t decay in the meantime.

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2nd Trade Update  April 5th, 2013 10:28am:  A couple weeks back I rolled up my long strike in my April 27/25 Put Spread by selling the 27 put at a loss and buying the April 29 put (below), basically doubling down, leaving me with more risk, but a much higher potential for break-even.  With My trade repair strategy working, I am now going to close the position for a gain.

ACTION:   Sold to Close XHB (28.28) Apr 29 / 25 Put Spread at .95 for a .20 gain

 

I WILL DEFINITELY LOOK TO ROLL OUR ON A BOUNCE, I THINK THE INDIVIDUAL HOME-BUILDER STOCKS ARE TELLING ME ALL I NEED TO KNOW, I WANT TO SEE SOME OF THE OTHER COMPONENTS FOLLOW SUIT.

 

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Trade Update  March 22nd, 2013, 2:50 pm:  XHB has failed to breakdown in the past month as the market has held up.  But just this week, LEN reported strong earnings that got everyone excited about the sector again, only to be met with stout selling pressure.  XHB also perked above 30, only to be met with selling pressure.

Our view is that XHB has priced in all the good news.  There are fewer and fewer buyers on each incremental data point, and against that, the valuations in the sector are sky-high.  I’m long the Apr 27/25 put spread that is close to worthless, but XHB still feels due for some selling, so I’m going to get back in the game with a trade adjustment.

I am going to buy the Apr 29 / 27 put spread.  So I’m basically buying the Apr 29 put to open, and selling the Apr 27 put (that I’m currently long) to close.  My new position is now long the Apr 29 / 25 put spread.

Action: Bought the XHB ($30.00) Apr 29 / 27 Put Spread for $0.30
New Position:  Long the XHB Apr 29 / 25 Put Spread for $0.75

I have a much better chance on a move lower in XHB now.  My new break-even level is 28.25, vs. 26.55 previously.  I’ve put some extra premium in the trade, so that’s the risk, but this week’s action says the bulls are tired.


Original Post February 22nd, 2013: Mission Accomplished Mr. Bernanke, Housing Bubble Re-Inflated!

Here is a preview of what I will discussing tonight on Options Action on CNBC at 5PM:

Based on the housing market headlines I’ve seen in the past year, you’d think housing prices were increasing 20% a year or something.  The “recovery” is only a recovery in comparison to the past few years.  It’s still a housing market depression when viewed in the context of the past 25 years.  New Home Sales over the past 25 years:

25 year chart of New Home Sales, Courtesy of Bloomberg
25 year chart of New Home Sales, Courtesy of Bloomberg

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The “recovery” is not looking so strong anymore.

Meanwhile, the housing-related stocks are trading like it’s boom times in the market.  Enis touched on this in his Macro Wrap post on Feb. 20th, writing:

The housing sector is one of the most overvalued sectors in the U.S. stock market, for several reasons.  Here are 3 brief points on why I’m bearish on TOL and U.S. homebuilders as a whole:

1)  This is a housing recovery, not a housing boom.  The housing market has clearly improved in the past 12 months, but TOL’s current selling pace in its communities is still below its 25 year average
2)  Meanwhile, the stock is priced for more than a boom.  The stock is trading at 2005 levels, when the stock earned more than $4 per share.  In 2013, it’s slated to earn around $1.
3)  Relative valuation for other sectors much better than homebuilders like TOL.  If you want to get long the U.S. housing market, buy Toyota or Ford.
Granted, the housing stocks have been overvalued for a while.  The technical picture is starting to look quite negative though, and the shorts might finally have their day in the sun.
The 5 year weekly chart of XHB shows an ETF that has advanced more than 100% from its Oct. 2011 lows.  That’s for an ETF with 34 close to equally weighted components, more than doubling in less than 18 months.  The chart shows decreasing volume on each push higher, and this week is the highest volume week in 2013 as sellers overwhelmed buyers:
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5 year weekly chart of XHB, Courtesy of Bloomberg
5 year weekly chart of XHB, Courtesy of Bloomberg
A move back to the $25 breakout level seems like a decent possibility if the broader market sells off.
Vol Snapshot:   As far as volatility goes, it’s a pretty good time to scoop some if you think the market is about to head lower. Here’s how XHB’s vol has traded over the past 2 years with IV30 in red:
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Screen Shot 2013-02-22 at 1.03.03 PM
LiveVol Pro
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TRADE: XHB ($27.85) Bought the Apr 27/25 Put Spread for .45

-Bought 1 Apr 27 Put for .70

-Sold 1 Apr 25 Put at .25

Break-Even on Apr Expiration:

-Profits of up to 1.55 between 26.55 and 25 max profit of 1.55 at 25 or below

-Losses up to .45 between 26.55 and 27, max loss of .45 at 25 or above

Trade Rationale:  If the Market is in a topping phase, which I believe it is, I want to get short exposure to sectors that I think have overshot on the upside, or in the case of housing and related sectors, already discount a good bit of the supposed recovery.