Posts Tagged ‘FSLR’

How I Run Money & My Current Watchlist

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Mad Hatter wrote a post and Ross has covestor. I know my friend Thiago is more informed than I, with a better memory, but a bit of a cowboy, and Howard likes to see all time highs and good price action, and Joe told me a while back that he reads and buys quality.  Any time any of them say they are buying something I get a better picture of what that means, how much work they’ve done, etc.  Its useful, to me at least…sooo…here’s my story:

I buy on 1. ideas/trends 2. fundamentals 3. momentum 4. recommendations. 5. volatility/liquidity of derivatives

My ideas come in the form of trends and observations I read about happening all over the world. Fundamentals are a high priority, I use morningstar premium to help me with that, I find their research great and useful. Momentum is great, and can be scary, I won’t touch momentum if it’s in a field I don’t understand, nor stupid high PEs, but ~25 and under – I’ll look at. Recommendations are high on my list, that means managers of hedge funds, money managers, friends, family and reader(s?) all get a high priority in my infinite search for good stocks. If a stock is trading with liquid options, it will get a higher priority than the one without, especially if implied volatility is generally higher – I like writing calls / shorting puts. I rarely ever use technical analysis, although I probably should. My holding time frame plans range from weeks to 50 years.  Once I buy, I feel committed and prefer to hold through anything.  Like my AAPL buy at $178 a few months ago – held right on through.  I don’t use stop losses, I get that from my dad, he retired at 42.  “If you liked it at $40, you gotta love it at $30″ is what he’d say.

I have a checkpoint set at 18% a year, but a goal of 26% per year…after taxes.

I currently have two accounts. The first holds positions in 19 tickers, right now. The only tickers where I’m not long the stock is FSLR and FCX I’m just short the $210 and $90 puts. I have 6 other open option legs where I offset the downside of my long positions by writing out of the money calls. I’m doing this to CCJ, JCI, and ITU. I’m also long calls on JCI and short puts on CCJ, these are both separate legs, aside from a long position in the stock. Right now this account is 14% cash, and no holding ever gets larger than ~8%.

I’ve just recently opened up an account at Interactive Brokers. I added more almost immediately because I liked them so much.  I opened it to program an algorithm to manage a buy-write for me, on several ETFs. That is going slowly, and looks like it might not work that well. Regardless, I’m going to manage a less complicated version of the algorithm, manually. I own four ETFs, that I actively trade the front month calls on. HXU.TO, SSO, VWO and FNI. I know HXU and SSO have issues with losses/slippage, but I’m sacrificing that slippage for volatility in the form of capturing option premium. I’m 103% invested right now, if you don’t count the fact that i’m twice exposed with the two double longs.  I plan to keep this account nearly 100% invested running my buy-write.

Equity is broken up ~63% (Investments) /37% (ETFs/Buy-Write)…I plan on keeping a ratio close to this, and if I beat the markets in the “Investments” account – cool, but right now, if I lost it *ALL* my “Investments” account and never added cash to the other, so long as I get index like performance on my “ETF account”, I could still retire in less than 30 years…no matter what.

My current watchlist which basically means I’ll write puts out of the money on these stocks all day long (and hopefully get assigned) include: FSLR, FCX, JCI, VE, CVA, MIL, CCC, IBKR, MORN…as well as a few others I can’t remember right now.

FSLR: I’m short puts, yes, I’m a bull

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Everybody always gets confused when you say you’re short puts. It’s a double negative, and it’s rightfully confusing. Let me explain.

When you’re short any asset, you profit from it falling in value. When a stock goes up, or stays flat, or doesn’t fall fast enough, the puts fall in value. So if you short them, you’re bullish. In my opinion, you’re less bullish, than if you actually owned this stock.

Yesterday, I was watching FSLR at $270. I thought to myself, “I want in, but that’s an expensive stock…I don’t want to pay $270 per share, but I would pay $210.” So, instead of putting in a limit order to buy it for $210 (and obviously never getting hit) I sell a put contract for someone to force the shares onto me at $210, in the future. They gave me $1.35 per share in exchange for me essentially selling them insurance to take the losses if the stock goes down lower than $210. BUT, since I’d buy it if the market took it to $210 anyway, then I really don’t mind having that downside. Infact, I kind of hope I get the chance to buy FSLR at $210, that’d be a treat.

There’s more perks. I don’t put up any cash, I only put up margin. My broker only requires me to keep 1/4 of the cash on hand to buy the shares should they hit $210. So, I have ‘invested’ $210/4 = $52.50 per share, and stand to profit $1.35 if FSLR doesn’t fall lower than $210. Now, it’s prudent to make sure you could make $210 per share available, if you’re forced to buy the stock. But I’d sell AAPL to get cash available if FSLR fell to $210. My point is, I can easily get a hold of the required $210, if the position goes against me. Now, if you can’t anti up the $210 per share, then you shouldn’t be doing this strategy. It can go horribly wrong if you don’t actually want to get assigned the shares at a cheaper than market price.

So, as of yesterday, there were 21 trading days, 30 days including the weekends. $1.35 / $52.50 = 2.6% in one month. That compounds to 36% per year…and I’m ‘invested’ in solar. While, I won’t make 200% a year, slow and steady wins the race. Its basically a good way to put excess margin to use. AND, the position can be closed early, if the stock moves up.

The nay sayers will tell you, that my upside is $1.35 per share, while my downside is $208.65. Wow, that looks horrible. But, you can’t think about it like this, because I make money, even if FSLR falls, so long as it doesn’t fall too much. Basically, if you’ve ever put in a limit order, and walked away, it’s the same thing – but my limit order lasts a month, and I get paid for leaving my order open.

Howard Lindzon hates this strategy, he calls it ‘assanine’. I’ve never heard him have a good reason for calling it that. Maybe he’ll chime in.

FSLR PutsI plotted a 3-D Profit/Loss for this strategy, but I used today’s data. My short was for $1.35 per share yesterday, today they fell to $1.08, since the stock moved up. I expect them to expire worthless, or be worth $0.10 very soon.

Yes, I would have made more if I would have bought the stock yesterday, hind sight it 20/20. I also would have had to put up cash, and in my opinion I would have had more downside, downside I don’t especially like in FSLR from $270 to $210 – I leave that downside to somebody else. I’m really leaving what I call, ‘the most likely downside’ to somebody else. Ie, it’s more likely that FSLR falls from $270 to $210 than it is to keep falling from $210 to I don’t know, say $150.