The $25,000 Portfolio – Stepping Our Way to a 10-Bagger!
by Phil - January 31st, 2011 6:50 am
I can’t believe we’re doing this again!
Thanks to FINALLY getting out of the damned DIA Feb $122.75 puts at $5.15, we’re up to around $35,000 virtual Dollars on June 11th’s $10,000 Portfolio (and we ran through the preliminary results last Friday, where we also predicted "Alpha 2 says "Cliff Ahead"). As I said in yesterday’s post "once more into the breach, my friends" and we’re going to put our profits to work with the fairly ambitious goal of getting to $100,000 by December 31st.
This portfolio will be available to Voyeur Members but trade ideas during chat will have their usual 1-hour delay. Premium members will get the trades with no delay and hopefully Matt will have a new system running that will allow Basic Members to see $25KP comments with no delay as well. New trade ideas and updates will be copied into the comment section of this post or, assuming I write one, the updates of this post. If you are not a Member yet, now is a good time to join. Check out the subscription page – Our EXAMPLE trade on C just closed up 200% and our ENP example returned 137% – not bad for free samples, right?
We didn’t play the $25KP this week but Monday’s DIA play in Member Chat was a good example of the kind of trades we’ll be looking for. The trade idea there was:
DIA $117.75 puts should give good bang for the buck at $1.06. If I had the new $25KP up and running I’d go for 10 with a DD at .86 and a stop at .76 for a $400 risk on the first trade.
As you can see from the chart below we didn’t get our chance to Double Down until Wednesday and there was a brief and scary dip Friday morning that touched our .76 level but, of course, my Friday morning Alert to Members went with 2 aggressively bearish plays (TZA and QID) so we were clearly not going to let a little flush scare us.
This is why we AVOID hard stops! When you put in hard stops you will get triggered on spikes all the time. When you see that quick move in the opposite direction prior to a stock making its big move – that’s…
Secret Santa’s Inflation Hedges for 2011
by Phil - December 25th, 2010 4:30 am
Merry Christmas!
I hope you got everything you wanted this holiday season and, most importantly, I hope you had time to spend with your family. I’m waiting for mine to wake up – waiting for my children to come out of their rooms so I can videotape (gosh I’m old, there’s no tape anymore) them in those first moments of Christmas morning – how can I not be of good cheer anticipating that?
It occurred to me, though, that I have something I can give you. Not peace on earth but perhaps peace of mind heading into the New Year – a way to help insure some future prosperity with a few inflation-fighting stock picks that can brighten up your portfolio, which also can be used to help balance the budget against unexpected cost increases.
This isn’t an options seminar or one about risk or leverage – these are just a few practical ideas you can use to hedge against inflation as it may affect your everyday life using basic industry ETFs and some simple hedging strategies to give you an opportunity to stay ahead of the markets if they keep going higher.
Idea #1 – Hedging for Home Price Inflation
Let’s say you have $20,000 put aside for a deposit on a home but you’re not sure it’s the right time to buy. On the other hand, let’s say you are worried that home prices will take off again (I doubt this but you never know). XHB is the homebuilder’s ETF, currently at $17.46 and they bottomed out at $7.77 in 2009 and were in the $40s back in 2006.
You can sell 20 contracts of the XHB 2013 $14 puts for $1.70 each ($3,400) and that obligates you to buy 2,000 shares of XHB at $14 (20% off the current price) and you can use that money to buy 30 2013 $15/18 bull call spreads for $1.40 ($4,200) so another $800 out of pocket and you have 30 $3 contracts for net $800 that pay back $9,000 if XHB simply gains .54 by Jan 2013. These bull call spreads, however, do not pay off early – the ETF needs to be above $18 at Jan 2013 options expiration day (the 18th).
So you are putting up $800 in cash and the margin requirement on the sale will be roughly $7,000 (1/2 of the potentially put…
Turning $10,000 into $50,000 by January 21st (Members Only)
by Phil - November 27th, 2010 6:27 am
We’re halfway to goal – let’s see if we can double up in two months!
We began this virtual portfolio on June 11th and we ran $10,000 to $26,000 by October 4th, when I decided the risks of playing with our 160% profit in what was getting to be a very choppy market outweighed the potential reward of doubling up again. Two months later, I’m not entirely sure I’ve changed my mind but we’ve had so many nice, short-term opportunities lately and we’ve been doing so many short-term, focused trades as we try to keep to cash that I thought this would be an ideal time to sharpen our short-term trading skills and spend time focusing on trades we can all follow and learn from.
The idea of these picks was to find $10,000 worth of small plays that we thought could gain 500% by Jan 21st as part of a larger portfolio. If you can do this with just 10% of a $100K portfolio or 5% of a $200K portfolio, that’s plenty of risk for these uncertain times and it’s a nice 25-50% bonus on the entire portfolio if it works out. Risk can be a component of a conservative portfolio if we wall it off safely. We wanted to increase our shopping budget for Christmas and, while 5x would have been nice, 2.5x in the hand beats 5x in the bush – always keep that in mind as we try to turn $25K into $50K.
What kind of trades were successful last time? It wasn’t really directional trades so much as opportunities, like grabbing BP on the cheap and, of course, our lovely artificial buy/writes like C, which was one of our surviving spreads and should finish off at the December goal of 1,150% profit. Of course we had a better VIX then – we were in the 30s in June and it’s not as simple to make money by just selling options at VIX 22 but it’s better than 18, where we’ve been since early October and that’s one of the reasons I lost my taste for this Portfolio – too much risk and not enough reward with the low VIX!
The lower VIX is a also why we’ve been taking more directional plays in Member Chat. If it’s a bad time to sell premium, then it’s a better (it’s never good)…
Defending Your Portfolio With Dividends – Q4 (Members Only)
by Phil - October 23rd, 2010 7:55 am
In uncertain markets, dividends can give you a critical investing edge.
As you can see from the chart on the left, just mindlessly investing in dividend-paying stocks can give you more than a 2:1 annual advantage in your investments.
Of course, here at PSW, we teach the art of selling options premiums – something that turns virtually any stock into a "dividend" payer. For example, MSFT is only a small, 2% dividend-payer but a fairly solid cash-machine of a stock that we don’t feel is likely to go bankrupt overnight so it makes for a nice safe staple in a long-term portfolio. But MSFT is also a very poorly-run company that hasn’t grown in 20 years but we can make it a much more interesting stock by simply selling covered calls.
For example, in our August edition of Dividend Payers, we looked at MSFT for $24.23 and we sell the Sept $24 calls for .77. This lowered our effective basis to $23.46 and selling the call putus in no special danger – we simply agreed to sell MSFT for $24 on expiration day in September (the 17th).
The stock was called away from us, and we made a .54 profit or 2.3% of our net $23.46 cash investment in less than 30 days. That works out to a 26% annualized ROI and we had an opportunity (as we had expected) to buy the stock again and again at $24 on Oct 4th and 5th and sell the November $24 calls for .90 for a net $23.10 re-entry and ANOTHER 3.8% GAIN if we are called away at $24 or greater on Nov 19th. Doesn’t that beat waiting a whole quarter for your 1% dividend checks?
Of course, you can optimize all this with timing and we favor stocks that are on sale – this is just a very simple example of how our most basic options strategy can drastically boost your annual returns on any stock in your portfolio.
Let’s say you don’t want to mess around with MSFT every month. You could have simply sold the 2012 $22.50s for $4.40 (also suggested in the August post), that dropped your net entry from $24.23 to $19.83 and getting called away at $22.50 would be a profit of 13.5% over 17 months PLUS you would be getting your .52 annual dividend…
Pop Culture – My Interview with Coke CEO Muhtar Kent
by Phil - October 20th, 2010 8:33 pm
Coca-Cola has always been one of my favorite companies.
They are the perennial safety play, a reliable grower that pays a 2.9% dividend and was one of the first companies we snapped up when the World went on sale in the ’08-’09 crash. Our faith in the company was well justified in the recent earnings report. Despite weak North American sales growth (2%) and flat growth in Europe, International sales grew at a tremendous clip with 11% volume increases in the Pacific and 12% increases in Eurasia/Africa. Best of all, those growth rates are "currency neutral net revenues" – so we are comparing apples to apples here – unlike many other companies who report their earnings in declining dollars.
On the last day of the quarter, the company closed their transaction for CCE’s North American business, an acquisition that will poise the company for further growth in the years ahead. What struck me the most about the report was the way Coca-Cola looks at the World. Coke doesn’t divide the World into North or South or East and West, Coke sees two kinds of countries – the ones with PER CAPITA consumption of more than 150 eight-ounce servings of Coke-brand products per year and the ones that they need to work harder in.
Also impressive is the company’s plan to repurchase $2Bn of their stock back BY THE END OF 2010. This will be fairly easy for the company to do as cash from operations has already increased 15% in the first 3 quarters of the year. Since we already know and love KO and, since we already know how to read an earnings release, I decided not to squander my time talking to Mr. Kent about clarifying product revenue steams in Guiana – that’s what conference calls are for!
Muhtar Kent is a man as impressive as the Company he runs. He’s about 10 years older than me, born in 1952 in New York City and his father was the Turkish Consul-General. Kent went to High School in Turkey, college in England with a masters in business from City University in London. He served in the Turkish military, came back to America with no money and answered a want ad for a job at the Coca-Cola Company, where he was (after gaining a quarter century of experience) appointed CEO in July of…

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Philip R. Davis is a founder Phil's Stock World, a stock and options trading site that teaches the art of options trading to newcomers and devises advanced strategies for expert traders...
Ilene is editor and affiliate program
coordinator for PSW. She manages the Favorites backup site
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