NaughtyPines

THE WEEK AHEAD: PIVOT TO NON-HIGH VOLATILITY STRATEGIES

AMEX:IWM   iShares Russell 2000 ETF
With this quarter's earnings season all but over and with VIX trundling along at sub-10 levels, there is a paucity of high implied volatility plays in the market for premium selling, so I'm looking at deploying something in either low volatility strategies (diagonals) or in directional plays that I've been eyeing.

Screening for underlyings with greater than 70% implied volatility rank over the past 52 weeks, greater than 50% background implied volatility, and relatively high options liquidity yields a few names -- P, HTZ, and NBR, but it'll be tough to squeeze good premium out of these because they're all <$10 underlyings. I would be willing to get into exchange-traded funds if only there was one with >70% implied volatility rank and >35% implied volatility; there currently isn't.

With the individual underlyings, a P 9 short straddle in the July 21st expiry yields 1.84 at the mid with BE's at 7.16 and 10.84 (put side, below expected move; call side, at expected move); a HTZ July 21st 10 short straddle yields 2.03 with BE's at 7.97 and 12.03 (both sides clear of the expected move); and the NBR July 21st 9 short straddle, 1.54, with BE's at the expected move on the put side and above it on the call (7.46/10.54).

Alternatively, NBR is a petro play,* so I can see taking a bullish assumption on the underlying and short putting it, even though it won't pay all that much (the July 21st 8 put brings in .40 with a BE of 7.60).

Directionally, I've got my eye on two sector exchange-traded funds: XLE and XRT. Out of all the sectors, energy and retail have been the most downtrodden, so this may be an opportunity to go long with comparatively "cheap" setups that have oodles of time to work out -- Poor Man's Covered Calls -- with long-dated back months several cycles out. I'll post setups on those separately; however, each time I look to pull the trigger on a bullish XLE setup, oil seems to trundle lower and XLE with it ... .

* -- NBR is deepwater; if they're not in trouble now with oil sub-$50/bbl., they will be in trouble in short order if prices hang around here for long. Generally, BE for deepwater oil exploration and production is well above this year's $55/bbl. high, so I'm hesitant to take a bullish assumption on deep water anything. Frankly, I'd rather put my buying power to work on something like XOP, where I'm not exposed to single name risk in this area, given the fact that there are so many troubled companies in this sector.
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