Global sovereign debt worries continued to drag the markets down today, but the trading was not nearly as one-sided as it was yesterday. Reports that Moody's is preparing to review Portugal's debt for a possible downgrade didn't help the mood on the street. The SPX broke through its 50 day moving average (dma) and traded as low as $1160 before recovering a bit to close at $1166, a loss of $8 on the day. RUT hit lows of $691 ($694 is its 50 dma) before closing at $699, for a loss of $8. Trading volume remained relatively high but didn't increase over yesterday's huge volume, with a 1% increase on the NYSE, flat on the NASDAQ, and flat on the S&P 500 stocks; however, the trading volume of the S&P 500 remained above 5.2 billion shares, well above its 50 dma.
The dollar opened the day very strong, up over 1%, primarily due to the weakened Euro; this placed additional pressure on the stock markets and easing of the dollar's strength late in the day probably accounted for the modest intraday recovery. The ISM Services Index reported out at 55.4 for April, unchanged from March. ADP reported 32k new private sector jobs were added to payrolls in April (19k were added in March). The unemployment numbers will be reported Friday, but most economists are predicting little or no improvement from the 9.7% level. Virtually all of the economic data is consistently pointing to a slow, modest recovery in progress.
My May RUT iron condor spread stands at a P/L of -$1,700 with a delta of +$56 and theta = +$150; so we still have a strong 3 to 1 theta/delta ratio and the short puts are right at one standard deviation OTM. The June iron condor stands at a P/L of -$860 with a delta of +$27 and theta = +$64. So the theta/delta ratio is still over 2 to 1 and the short puts are just inside one standard deviation OTM. So now we wait to see if the other shoe drops...
Weakness Continues
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