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How I Plan To Profit From The Next Flash Crash

Summary What happens to some ETFs but not others and why. Managing the risk by using a pair trade. The key is increased market volatility. Introduction As I wrote a series of articles explaining how I created my own portfolio over a lifetime (including the lessons of both success and failure), I received question about how a flash crash occurs. This led me to include an article in the series explaining my understanding about how a flash crash gets started and how some stocks, and particularly some ETFs, end up with such exaggerated extremes during a flash crash. The explanation was very well received by readers. You can find the full article here . The discussion in the comments sections led me to consider how one might profit from the midst of panic. When the crowd is panicking someone is always finding a way to profit from the overreactions that occur. One reader commented that s/he intended to place a good until cancelled order to buy one of the ETFs that got hammered during the flash crash session of August 24, 2015. At first glance it seemed like a reasonable way to take advantage of the situation when the price of an ETF falls significantly below what one could reasonably expect to be the net asset value [NAV] of the underlying assets. But as I thought about it some more I decided there might be a negative catch involved called risk. It seemed like a relatively low risk trade at face value. You commit no funds unless the ETF falls precipitously and you get to buy at a price you otherwise would not believe possible. However, there is also a growing possibility that the next time this happens it could very well not be a flash crash but the beginning of a bear market. That is what I define as the potential risk involved in the trade. It is possible that the speculative trade (not to be confused with investing, which I define as long-term), could still yield a profit if the trader sold the position either near the close or early the next day once the price and NAV normalized. But, if the market falls into a bear market that begins with a waterfall formation of multiple gap-down trading sessions, the profit could disappear in just a few sessions, or even just hours, and not come back for months. My first rule of investing is to limit losses. So, I decided to consider alternative ways to reduce the risk of the trade and limit the potential loss. Before I continue, I want to explain that this is not something I look for on a regular basis. Those who have followed my work will know that I am generally a very conservative, long-term investor looking to increase the income from my portfolio over time. But, occasionally there appears a unique opportunity that I want to take advantage of that poses a relatively low-risk (or limited amount of risk) with a very high reward potential. This is one of those trading opportunities that I look at very infrequently. Also, I do not use very much capital on such a trade. There is no such thing as a sure thing. To limit risk I do two things in this instance: limit how much capital I put at risk to limit my potential loss; and make sure it is a trade that does not require me to guess the direction of the overall market trend. I know what you are thinking: a flash crash, by definition, means the direction of the market is down. But it does not necessarily define the overall trend. After the last two flash crashes (2010 and 2015) the market went higher in subsequent months. A flash crash can happen in either a bear market or a bull market. It is temporary, hence the “flash” component, lasting only a few minutes or hours, at most. Then stock prices snap back to near where prices were prior to the flash crash. This is just a strategy I plan to employ to take advantage of the next one. If you believe that the Federal Reserve and SEC have everything under control and that another flash crash will never occur, you should stop reading now. However, if you believe as I do that another flash crash is likely to occur sometime in the next year or two, then the potential profit from this strategy may make sense to you. What happens to some ETFs but not others and why I want to start with an illustration using the Guggenheim S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (NYSEARCA: RSP ) and the SPDR S&P 500 EFT (NYSEARCA: SPY ). As the saying goes, “A picture is worth a thousand words.” (click to enlarge) This chart represent hourly price activity for the two Indexes from opening on August 24, 2015 to the close on August 25th. Notice the range from the daily high to the daily low for RSP on August 24th, $75.57 to $43.77. Amazing, is it not? The range of the SPY was $197.48 to $182.40. The range for RSP was a staggering 42.1 percent while the range for a similar ETF, SPY, was only 7.6 percent. How could this happen, you may ask? After all, both ETFs hold the same stocks, components of the S&P 500 (^GSPC), although in two different weighting methods, so how could the prices vary so dramatically? The short answer is volume and liquidity. For the long version I will use an excerpt from my earlier article: Normally a market maker will keep the spread (difference between the bid and ask prices) narrowly around the NAV of the underlying assets of the fund. Under normal circumstances they will gladly buy the ETF for a little under the NAV and then sell it for a little more than the NAV when needed to keep shares trading efficiently. When trading in one of the stocks that make up the ETF is halted by an exchange, having hit its “limit” down as determined by the exchange, the market maker for that ETF must decide what the spread should be and place orders accordingly. Market makers are not in the business to lose money, so when they err it is always on the side of caution. In this case, not knowing what the NAV is (because trading in some stocks has been halted and when those stocks begin trading again the price may be different from when it was halted), the market maker most likely looked for price support levels in the stocks for which a value could not be determined and placed a bid to buy at an assumed NAV based upon those prices. When multiple stocks are halted at the same time, the market maker lowers the bid to make certain that a loss is not incurred. With the market falling so abruptly, the bids by the market makers were set significantly below actual (or the last known) NAV. Hopefully, that is clear enough to explain why some ETFs diverged significantly from the value of the underlying stocks that make up the funds. My best guess is that the market maker for RSP considered its position to contain more risk since it did not have the protection of the weighting for the stable companies at the top. Thus, when several of the stocks that make up the S&P experienced a halt in trading at the same time, especially when many of those issues were of lesser capitalization, the market maker simply chose a technical support level for those shares that it could expect to hold up and set a bid based upon the much lower assumed NAV. In addition, the HFTs, sensing a rout and recognizing a thinly traded ETF in RSP, probably hit the sell button with bids even lower and then probably cancelled those orders before being filled. The HFTs could then place buy orders even lower and pick up shares at deep discounts when there were no other bids if sellers placed market orders. The HFT trading systems are automated so there are rarely humans involved. The programs are set to identify unusual market activity and to predict potential outcomes. They place thousands of orders and can cancel within a few thousandths of a second with the objective to move the price. They move with incredible speed and usually take pennies or fractions of a penny from many thousands or millions of transaction per day. On August 24, 2015, I suspect some HFTs made chunks instead of pennies. Volatility is the friend of HFTs. Managing risk by using a pair trade It should be obvious that if an investor had the presence of mind to have bought shares of RSP when the price got distorted to the downside, s/he would have turned a nice profit. The problem, as I pointed out earlier, is that the next time the market drops like this it may actually be the beginning of a major bear market and the rebound may not be as strong. One way to tell, would be how long the share price of RSP remains extremely low compared to SPY and if the difference begins to narrow over the course of the trading session with SPY falling to reduce the gap over a matter of hours rather than minutes. If that happens my strategy will work even better. There are three ways to enter the trade and I will explain each one. Each has a different risk profile and a different potential return. There is the convenient entry plan, the actively managed entry plan, and the reactionary plan. I do not know which will work the best but have my expectations. I will try out each one and report back if/when we have another flash crash on how each alternative plan of entry worked out. The convenient plan requires me to buy an out-of-the-money put option contract on the SPY with a relatively near-term expiration, say January or March of 2016 with a strike of $185 (or about eight percent below the current market value). At the same time I want to place a limit order to buy 250 shares of RSP at a price of $50. The reason for using 250 shares instead of a round lot is to match the approximate values of the underlying equities represented by the 1 contract of SPY at a price of $185 to the expected ending value of RSP (about four percent below the current price) at about $72. I use four percent because that is the value at which both SPY and RSP fell by the close compared to the previous close during the August 2015 flash crash. The number of shares is also off a few shares but I am not trying to get a perfect balance or match, just a close approximation of similar values. I want both pieces of the trade to have similar values so that a one percent move in either index will make both positions of the underlying move about the same amount. If a flash crash happens on Monday (not expected but always possible), as long as it does not happen before I can enter my positions, I would be positioned to gain significantly from it. So, let’s do the math. In a flash crash, we expect both positions to end up near where we started, maybe a little lower. If both were to settle about four percent lower than the previous close, as happened on August 24, 2015, then RSP would generate a profit of $5,500, while the put on January SPY put option (costing me $150 + commission) might eke out a small gain of a couple hundred dollars or so. At the end of the day I would sell my RSP shares near the close for a gain of about 44 percent. The initial position in the SPY put option, assuming I use a January expiration contract would be about $150 ($1.50 x 100 = $150). This is all I would need until a flash crash actually happens. If RSP suddenly drops to $50 during a flash crash, my order should get filled and that end of the position would cost me $12,500 ($50 x $250 = $12,500). If a flash crash happens I will tie up $12,650 and expect a return of about $5,500. If it does not, I lose the $150. Then, when the January SPY put option is near expiration I can sell it or let it expire worthless (if SPY stays above the strike price, which is likely) and purchase another put option on SPY further out into the future. And then I wait again. This could require a lot of patience since the last two occurrences were over five years apart. If it takes that long again, I could be out $150 a month for 60 months, or $9,000. Buying puts that are expire further into the future could bring the monthly cost down but it would also require lowering the strike price to ensure the trade could be profitable. That changes the risk profile. It does not make much sense. So, the next step is to determine when to initiate the put option position and when to stay on the sidelines to lower the cost and keep the trade profitable. The Key is market volatility This is the hard part to identify. On the days preceding each flash crash there were at least one trading session that exhibited the trait for which I am watching. I want the ^GSPC to fall for the day more than the average daily movement of the preceding two weeks and close at or very near the low of the day. If you look at the charts below from May of 2010 and August of 2015 for both ^GSPC you will notice that within the two days prior to the flash crash, the index had a larger than average down day and closed at or near the low of the day. We will have some false positives along the way but this can reduce how long we are in the market with a put option and bearing the cost of a potentially worthless asset. The same pattern also occurred in both ETF charts. S&P 500 Index from 2010 S&P 500 chart from 2015 I would insert the charts but YCharts does not support bar graphs which are necessary for the illustration and Yahoo! Finance did not let me copy these images. It is clearer on the August 2015 chart, but remember that there are two components: size of the move and closing near the low. The size components is what weeds out most false positives. The second entry plan requires active management. As an alternative to leaving the put option open and letting it expire worthless, one could only buy the option when the set up occurs, hold it for a week or so and then sell it if nothing happens, incurring a much smaller potential loss (or maybe a gain from time to time) from each entry attempt. That is a lot of work, but it could potentially make the trade far more profitable than the convenient alternative. The third entry plan is the reactionary plan. This alternative requires us to just place the limit order to buy the shares of RSP and wait for the flash to start. Then buy the SPY put options about ten percent or more out of the money in the closest expiration month (be sure you are not within just a few days of expiration because you do not want to have the options executed). You will pay more for the options in this scenario but this is the one that makes the most sense to me. I do not want to leave the RSP order completely naked for very long, so if the market begins to fall precipitously I would buy the SPY puts no later than when then price of RSP falls below my order limit price of $50. In this instance, once we have both positions in place we are merely waiting for the prices of the two index ETFs to normalize as we have already locked in the profit defined by the spread between the values of the two positions. This alternative is likely to provide a one-day gain of 35 percent or more. It may never happen. But if the market just continues higher we never make an investment and have no capital at risk. The one big caveat that I need to make clear is that we need to keep an eye on the RSP share price. If the market begins to fall into a bear market without a flash crash it will be necessary to lower the limit order price on RSP. I plan to keep it at about 33-35 percent. In 2015, RSP fell 42.7 percent from the previous day’s closing price but then rebounded to close up 67.5 percent. In 2010, RSP fell 58.1 percent and rebounded 129.2 percent. I am not trying to be greedy and capture all of the move. I just want a reasonable piece out of the middle. Now let us look at the charts. May 2010 RSP chart May 2010 SPY chart Notice that SPY only fell 10.1 percent and rebounded almost 7.6 percent by the close on May 6, 2010. August 2015 RSP chart August 2015 SPY chart Here we see that SPY only fell 7.8 percent from the previous close at the bottom and rebounded by 3.9 percent on August 24, 2015. Conclusion We only want to capture the difference in movement between the two ETFs. It can be looked at as a spread, however, it is not a true spread since I use an option on one end and shares on the other. I do not, as a rule, sell shares short. I use options to hedge against downside risk and intend to use options to protect against the downside potential should the crash turn out to be more than just a flash in the pan, so to speak. Once I have the two positions filled, in the reactionary entry plan, I will profit. There is no doubt of that since the underlying assets will eventually revert back to NAV on both and the difference is very little between the two ETFs while the difference that I intend to lock in will be significant. We have only had two such occurrences to date. There may never be another. But I want to be prepared to enjoy that day if it does come again.

Weaker Yuan Put Currency-Hedged Chinese ETFs In Focus

Devaluation fear is gripping the Chinese currency yuan market again after five months. The currency fell to a four-month low level last week and stoked possibilities of further weakness going forward. A host of reasons are responsible for this. First, the relentless flow of offhand economic data added fuel to hopes for further stimulus measures. The Chinese economy is on its way to deliver a 25-year low expansion this year. China has already rolled-out a few of policy easing measures which haven’t yet materially lifted economic growth. The likeliness of more easing should devalue the currency ahead. In August, China’s central bank devalued the currency by 2%, following which yuan posted the largest single-day decline since the historical devaluation in 1994, after the country arranged its official and market rates in a line. Notably, the Chinese authorities follow a trading band around the official reference rate it sets each day for the value of yuan against the U.S. dollar. The Chinese government announced in August that renminbi’s central parity rate would follow the previous day’s closing spot rates more closely going forward. This indicates China’s intent to make its currency more market driven. As a result, a section of analysts believe that the actual motive behind this currency move was to prepare yuan as a reserve currency. However, the Chinese central bank assured the market that it will promptly intervene into the currency market if depreciation crosses the 3% mark. Now, with yuan getting the IMF nod to join the reserve currency basket from October 2016, China’s efforts the make the currency more “freely usable” and market oriented will likely go on (read: IMF Green Signal Put Yuan ETFs in Focus ). Last week, the currency weakened for two successive sessions amid lower fixings from the central bank, per CNBC . At the current level, yuan hovers around a four-and-a-half year low as PBOC fixed the yuan/dollar official midpoint ‘at its weakest since July 2011′. If this weakening continues, Asian emerging markets which are largely involved in exports would end up in a currency-war. Most export-centric economies will likely be forced to depreciate their currencies to stave off competitive and rev up their exports (read: 3 Country ETFs Impacted By China Currency Devaluation ). The investing world is divided into two clusters. While one part believes that there is no basis for persistent yuan depreciation, the other believes that extra devaluation is needed for the balance of payments’ adjustments, and for the authorities to jumpstart the economy and stamp out deflationary fears. The PBOC announced late last Friday that it has rolled out a yuan index rate against a basket of currencies, rather than tracking the greenback solely. Some see this as an indication of further weakening in yuan. Un-hedged ETFs tracking the nation have actually outperformed the broader market so far in Q4. Investors should note that even after such speculation, yuan declined just 0.26% against the U.S. dollar from August 12 to December 10, which is not at all a material devaluation. Still investors fearing yuan devaluation but still wishing to be invested in China ETFs, might try these two below-mentioned currency-hedged ETFs. The CSOP MSCI China A International Hedged ETF (NYSEARCA: CNHX ) in Focus The CSOP MSCI China A International Hedged Exchange Traded Fund looks to track the performance of the MSCI China A International with CNH 100% Hedged to USD Index. The index delivers the performance by hedging the currency exposure of the MSCI China A International Index, to the USD. The index is 100% hedged to the USD by selling Renminbi currency forwards at the one-month forward rate. Making its debut in mid October, the fund has amassed about $3 million in assets. It charges 79 bps in fees. The index is heavy on financials which makes up about one-third of the portfolio followed by Industrials (17.9%). The 381-holding product is extremely diversified in nature with no stock accounting for more than 0.01% of the basket. The Deutsche X-trackers CSI 300 China A-Shares Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHX ) in Focus The Deutsche X-trackers CSI 300 China A-Shares Hedged Equity ETF looks to track the CSI 300 USD Hedged Index. The fund has amassed about $2.5 million in assets and its expense ratio is 0.85%. This index also has a tilt toward the financial sector with about 40% exposure. Industrials (17.1%) and Consumer Discretionary (11.2%) take the next two spots. In short, the fund is the currency-hedged version of the Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHR ) . Notably, the 300-stock ASHR is also a diversified fund, though not as wide as CNHX. The top holding of ASHR takes 4.05% of the fund. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

4 Consumer ETFs To Ride On Holiday Optimism

Despite a weak start, the holiday season gained a firmer footing. This is especially true given the modest retail sales data for November and an improved consumer sentiment data for December. After months of sluggish spending, retail sales rose a modest 0.2% in November, representing the largest increase since July. Meanwhile, consumer confidence improved for the third consecutive month in December, with the preliminary University of Michigan sentiment index reading 91.8, up from 91.3 in November (read: 5 ETFs for Loads of Holiday Shopping Delight ). Solid job additions, slowly rising wages and cheap fuel are providing consumers extra money to spend on a wide range of products including electronics and appliances, clothing, sporting goods and books, and at restaurants and bars. In particular, spending increased 0.8% on clothing, 0.6% on electronics and appliances, and 0.8% at sporting goods and hobby stores. The strong trend is likely to continue for the rest of the holiday shopping season given an improving U.S. economy, a recovering housing market and stepped-up service activities. The National Retail Federation (NYSE: NRF ) expects total holiday sales in November and December (excluding autos, gas and restaurant) to grow at a solid pace of 3.7%. Though this marks a deceleration from last year’s growth rate of 4.1%, it is well above the 10-year average of 2.5%. Investors should note that online sales have superseded brick-and-mortar retail sales this year with mobile shopping playing a crucial role. Online sales are projected to grow 6-8% to $105 billion. ComScore expects online sales to jump 14% year over year to $70.06 billion for the full holiday season (November and December), outpacing the growth of brick-and-mortar retail sales. Given the holiday cheer, investors should cycle into the consumer discretionary space in order to obtain a nice momentum play. While looking at individual companies is certainly an option, a focus on the top-ranked consumer discretionary ETFs could be a less risky way to tap into the same broad trends (see: all the Consumer Discretionary ETFs here ). Top Ranked Consumer Discretionary ETF in Focus We have found a number of ETFs that have the top Zacks ETF Rank of 1 or ‘Strong Buy’ rating in this space and are thus expected to outperform in the months to come. While all the top-ranked ETFs are likely to outperform, the following four funds could be good choices. These funds have enjoyed a strong momentum and have potentially superior weighting methodologies that could allow them to continue leading the consumer space in the coming months. PowerShares DWA Consumer Cyclicals Momentum Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PEZ ) This product tracks the DWA Consumer Cyclicals Technical Leaders Index. It holds 38 stocks having positive relative strength (momentum) characteristics, with none holding more than 5.4% of assets. This approach results in a large cap tilt at 43%, followed by 31% in mid caps and the rest in small. About 30% of the portfolio is dominated by specialty retail while hotel restaurants and leisure, textiles apparel and luxury goods, and airlines round off the next three positions with double-digit exposure each. The fund has managed $277.8 million in its asset base while trades in a lower average daily volume of 58,000 shares. It charges 60 bps in annual fees and added about 0.7% over the past one month. First Trust Consumer Discretionary AlphaDEX ETF (NYSEARCA: FXD ) This follows an AlphaDEX methodology and ranks stocks in the consumer space by various growth and value factors, eliminating the bottom ranked 25% of the stocks. This approach results in a basket of 129 stocks that are well spread out across each security, with none holding more than 1.7% of assets. About 49% of the portfolio is focused on mid cap securities with specialty retail being the top sector accounting for nearly one-fourth of the portfolio, closely followed by media (15.8%). FXD is one of the popular and liquid ETFs in the consumer discretionary space with AUM of $2.4 billion and average daily volume of 456,000 shares per day. It charges a higher 63 bps in annual fees and gained 0.9% over the past one month. Market Vectors Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: RTH ) This fund provides exposure to the retail segment of the broad consumer space by tracking the Market Vectors US Listed Retail 25 Index. It holds about 26 stocks in its basket with AUM of $147.6 million, while average daily volume is light at around 62,000 shares. Expense ratio came in at 0.35%. It is a large-cap centric fund that is heavily concentrated on the top firm Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN ) with 15.3% share, closely followed by Home Depot (NYSE: HD ) at 8.9%. Sector wise, specialty retail occupies the top position with 29% share, followed by a double-digit allocation each to Internet & catalogue retail, hypermarkets, drug stores, and health care services. The product has added 5.3% over the past month. SPDR S&P Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) This product tracks the S&P Retail Select Industry Index, holding 104 securities in its basket. It is widely spread across each component as none of these holds more than 1.47% of total assets. Small-cap stocks dominate about two-thirds of the portfolio while the rest have been split between the other two market cap levels. In terms of sector holdings, apparel retail takes the top spot with 22.3% share while specialty stores, automotive retail, and Internet retail also have a double-digit allocation each. XRT is the most popular and actively traded ETF in the retail space with AUM of about $948.4 million and average daily volume of more than 4.1 million shares. It charges 35 bps in annual fees and gained 2.5% in the past one month. Link to the original post on Zacks.com