Contrarian Signs

Although unlikely based on the current geopolitical news along with an almost certain interest rate hike announcement next week, the S&P 500 Index and other widely followed equity indices seem to be holding up better than might be expected. Indeed technical patterns and some indicators suggest the pullback could be ending soon. The Market Review explains along with some ideas to consider from our Volatility Ranker tool.

S&P 500 Index (SPX) 4328.87 slipped 55.78 points or -1.27% last week after bouncing up as high as 4416.78 Thursday. Should it hold above 4250 between now and the interest rate announcement, a Head & Shoulders Bottom pattern could form. However, closes below 4222.62 and especially below 4114.65 will activate a much larger Head & Shoulders Top from the January 4 high at 4818.62, with a measuring objective down at 3625, well into a bear market.

The Elliott wave alternative view detailed last week in Digest Issue 9 "Technical Tales [Charts]" suggests a possible a-b-c counter move underway with the potential for it to move back above the 200-day Moving Average. If so, the likelihood increases for the formation of the Head & Shoulder Bottom, with the potential to move back above the 50-day Moving Average.

Both the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ337.80, and the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) 198.66, display similar patterns reflecting the current known negative influences and with the potential to turn higher on any optimistic news including a smaller interest rate hike despite higher inflation.

CBOE Volatility Index® (VIX) added 4.39 points or +15.91% last week ending at 31.98. Our similar IVolatility Implied Volatility Index Mean, IVXM using four at-the-money options for each expiration period along with our proprietary technique that includes the delta and vega of each option, increased 3.04 points or +12.80% ending at 26.79%. On Tuesday, it made another new 52-week high at 28.33 before pulling back slightly but appears trending higher.

table

VIX Futures Premium

VIX futures premium ended Friday at -2.14%, in the red bear zone again last week. With 8 days before March futures expire and with accelerating time premium decay.

table

The chart reflects the distance from the VIX to the futures curve computed from the two front-month contracts. Since most of the volume and open interest are in the two closest futures contracts measuring the volume-weighted premium relative to the standard 30-day VIX provides a good real-time sentiment indicator based upon actual commitments of large Asset Managers and Leveraged Funds.

VIX Correlation Indicator

Typically, the VIX and the SPX move in opposite directions. As the SPX advances, the VIX normally declines to suggest less interest in bidding up SPX puts. Historically when the correlation turns positive it sends a warning signal since positive readings, and even some just less negative, are followed by SPX declines, perhaps just minor pullbacks, or occasionally something more menacing. The higher the correlation coefficient the more significant the signal. The most important are positive, above zero. Monday it started at a normal -.87 then turned increasingly positive all week, especially on Thursday before ending Friday at -.35. Any further advance this week into positive territory will send a clear warning signal for SPX.

VIX Put/Call Ratio

The put/call ratio reflects the total number of puts traded each day divided by the total number of calls. As one of the best measures of market sentiment, it helps determine when option buyers are predominantly bullish or bearish and if bias is intensifying or diminishing. A rising ratio suggests increasing bearish sentiment while a declining ratio suggests bullish sentiment. The greatest value comes at extremes, similar to an overbought/oversold oscillator used as a contrary indicator.

Ratios below .3 imply a sense of overbought euphoria while ratios over .7 reflect pessimism.

However, since the VIX and the SPX move in opposite directions increased call option buying reveals increased hedging downside risk activity and shorting the market. In this case, .3 reflects maximum pessimism as in an oversold market. Friday's chart:

table

Friday's VIX put/call ratio ended at .29. On Friday, December 17, it also reached .29 after the VIX spiked up to 35.32 intraday on December 3, called Omicron Friday. Last year including December 3 shown on the chart, it reached the .25 extreme low levels five other times. This reflects significant hedging activity on Friday and from a contrarian perspective may once again suggest a short-term SPX bottom.

Market Breadth as measured by our preferred gauge, the NYSE ratio adjusted Summation Index that considers the number of issues traded, and reported by McClellan Financial Publications continued slightly higher after making a pivot at -731.20 on February 24. For the week, it gained 45.00 points or +6.21% ending at -679.39. This reliable indicator suggests the bears are running out of reasons to keep selling.

table

Option Ideas

Searching for opportunities based on the difference between option implied volatility and historical volatility, also called realized volatility help option traders quickly find candidates for further research.

Here are Friday's results using the Underlying Volatility Ranker found under Open My Tools on the IVolLive front page, ranked and listed by high IV Index/HV, %.

table

High ratios mean options are expensive relative to the recent movement of the underlying often for good reason. Typically selling strategies, such as short put spreads, short call spreads, or ratio spread with more shorts than long benefit from high implied volatility.

Extracted from a page of 50 ranked from the highest ratios in the blue highlighted column on the right, the sample above offers some ideas to consider. Using this handy tool, they can also be ranked by Historical Volatility, IV Index Change, or by range.

Strategy

On Wednesday, March 15, after the FOMC meeting the widely anticipated rate hike announcement will occur with a 25 bps hike already reflected in market prices. However, the next Consumer Price Index for February will be released next Thursday, March 10, with the potential to alter the FOMC decision. Therefore, expect implied volatility to remain relatively high until Thursday.

Should the equity indices manage to turn higher expect a more cautious less speculative environment with new leaders? In the meanwhile, follow the rule of unknowns by initially positioning portfolio holdings for both up or down markets, and then adjusting, and hedging until the direction becomes apparent.

Summary

The S&P 500 Index as well as other widely followed equity indices could be in the process of forming bottoming patterns, perhaps even Head & Shoulder Bottoms if they stay above previous lows. While implied volatility continues to rise, other indicators suggest an oversold market with the potential to turn higher on any improved fundamental news.

Disclaimer: IVolatility.com is not a registered investment adviser and does not offer personalized advice specific to the needs and risk profiles of its readers.Nothing contained in this letter ...

more
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Or Sign in with