Star InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar Inactive
 

Some of you may have read or heard analysts beginning to discuss what many call the Goldilocks view of the current markets: we should be bullish because 1) rising taxes and reduced spending will stimulate growth in the economy, 2) the Fed will continue their quantitative easing programs but no inflation will result, and 3) the government can easily afford the higher interest rates that are coming after our debt is downgraded. In other words, the bullish trend is a fantasy, a Goldilocks story. The markets have been trading higher since mid-November (running over my December condor in the process), but some analysts are questioning whether the euphoria has been over done or is misplaced entirely. I am inclined to agree with this point of view, but it is dangerous to get in front of this train.

SPX gave back most of yesterday's gains, closing down $11 at $1436 while RUT traded flat at $848. Perhaps a little more ominously, VIX moved up almost two points to 17.4%. Trading volume dropped off from yesterday with 2.7 billion shares of the S&P 500 stocks trading; volume fell 9.8% on the NYSE and decreased 4% on NASDAQ.

Housing starts for November came in at 861k, down from 888k in October, but building permits jumped to 899k from the previous month's 868k. So the thesis of a slow real estate recovery appears to be supported by this data. Probably the emphasis should be on the word, slow. And, if the tax reform discussions include dropping the mortgage interest deduction, that may push real estate back off the cliff again. Many of my friends hold mortgages simply for the tax deduction and my younger friends would not be as attracted to buying a house without that tax advantage. A lot of construction and finance industry jobs are dependent on a healthy real estate market.

I closed the call spreads in my December condor today, taking the largest loss of my trading career - ouch! But, at the expense of my pride, and so you can learn from my mistakes, here goes. My Dec condor on RUT started at 880/890 and 710/720. When the market plunged after the elections, I was at the point of hedging my put spreads. But the move downward and all of the fiscal cliff drama spooked me, so I repositioned my condor: I rolled the calls down to 830/840 and the puts down to 690/700. That looked good for a few days, but then the market turned and roared upward. I rolled the 830/840 calls to 850/860 and eventually closed them for a big loss. But note the moral of the story: if I had simply left the original condor alone and hedged the put spreads just as I always do (my normal rules), that condor would be standing at a gain of about 17-19%. So the lessons are: 1) develop your trading system of rules, 2) follow the rules with discipline, and 3) put your emotions aside.