Sunday, October 26, 2008

The Covered Call




The credit bubble has made fools out of many people. Economists assumed housing prices couldn't systematically drop. Banks didn't care about the underlying credit worthiness of the home owners since they quickly repackaged the loans and sold them to Fannie, Freddie, or Bear Stearns. Economics has lived up to its reputation of being a backward looking study whose predictive ability stinks. Financial risk cannot be measured based on distributions of historical returns since history does not repeat itself. This time is, and will continue to be different than '29, '73, '87, or '01. Stockpickers, this site included, have made gutsy bets on downtrodden stocks only to see their market prices plummet further.

VIX

With the CBOE volatity index (VIX), "fear index" at all-time highs, options are steeply priced due to implied near-term volatility. A high VIX index, if you're a contrarian, is a bullish signal since markets tend to place too much emphasis on the recent past.

A short call

This particular strategy is an alternative to the 1.27% yield of a 6-month T-bill or could be a long-term investment with capped upside and limited downside. Here's the play: Find a stock whose fundamentals you aren't too afraid of. Simultaneously buy shares and sell a deep-in-the-money call option. I've selected Discover Financial, a previous long only recommendation.


DFS

Discover Financial (DFS) issues credit cards and processes payments. Charge-offs are rising but Discover has over $10B in cash, only 1.85B in debt, a mere 30M in mortgage-related securities, and $1B in loan loss provisions for those who are indifferent about poor credit records. Loans, like with American Express are securitized and are therefore off-balance-sheet. Lack of willing buyers of receivables is the most serious near-term concern. Yesterday Visa and MasterCard announced a $2.75B settlement with Discover over anti-competitive practices. That adds more of a cash cushion. This is a good business at a good price (not a great business at a fantastic price--these situations are obviously rare).

The possible payoff

A 7.50 Nov 2008 call sells for 2.55/2.95 (bid/ask). If you buy 100 shares at 9.68 + .05 per share commission and collect the 2.51 (2.55 - 4.00 commission) from the short call option you face a 74% loss if the stock goes to zero, a breakeven scenario at 7.27 and a maximum profit of 2.88% if the stock finishes above 7.50. The stock could drop a further 22% from the current price and you'd still make 2.88% (including commission). This could be compared to picking up nickles in front of a steam roller. I think the downside protection is sufficient to justify a short-term alternative for idle cash.

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Disclosure:
Faro has recently made this trade. Do this with only a small portion of your available cash. Don't get too greedy and only invest in a company whose fundamentals you believe to be sound. If I were long-only one credit card company it would be AXP (a similar covered position could be made with a slightly higher investment and a lower maximum payoff).

Image: http://blog.sellsiusrealestate.com/wp-content/credit-bubble.gif

Saturday, October 11, 2008

For Sale?


After the worst week ever for the Dow, the recent drop-off is now worthy of wikipedia. At cocktail parties and dinner tables the topic du jour is the market and the effect on investors' retirement accounts. We love to put the stock market in the simplest of terms, and in an odd retrospective view. The stock market is merely a place where businesses are bought and sold. Contrary to popular opinion, it is never universally wrong or right to buy or sell. But we should at least think about why we're buying or selling a piece of a business.



Cash flows

According to finance theory (and sometimes reality) the value of any asset is equal to the present value of all future expected cash flows. And with some stocks down 80% +, their very existence is now questioned, even without the toxic balance sheets of banks. Peak to trough the market has fallen over 46%, well into what economists consider bear market territory.


So if you have some cash on the sidelines, here's what to look for in companies and in strategies:


  • A super clean balance sheet: since credit is a huge part of the problem, debt is now a sin. We have yet to see the coming wave of corporate debt defaults. The 10%+ spread of non-investment grade debt to US Treasuries is a testament to risk and uncertainty.


  • Tiny market caps: these are thinly traded and have little or no analyst coverage; their price swings can be the biggest and their pricing the most inefficient.


  • A large cash pile: this serves as a further cushion, or margin of safety, against a greater collapse.


  • A business: a product or service that is needed or wanted in any economic environment.


  • Options: covered calls (if you'd like to lower your effective cost basis but cap your upside, consider this) or married puts (to protect the downside).


And?


Faro is finding extreme value in global mining, Brazilian poultry, and Chinese education. Timing the market bottom is a fool's errand. However, I wouldn't bet (long at least) on banks or the American consumer (70% of GDP). Shrinking retirement accounts, falling home prices, and tightened credit must eventually bring even the most spendthrift of consumers to question whether to fork out $40.00 for dinner or drop $200.00 for jeans. Though the recent plunge reflects this, the enhanced awareness may likely lead to a self-fulfilling prophesy: an even bigger drop for companies that sell stuff people only think they need.


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Note: Though readers may note the poor record (along with the market) of previous stock recommendations on this site, Faro is happy to report a flat last two weeks due to a short position in a domestic retailer.

Image: http://www.biojobblog.com/for_sale_sign(1).jpg