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Index of S&P 500 Companies Trading Above Their 200-Day SMA

Biden Economic Team
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This month’s Trading Journal commentary will review a new chartable index – tracking the number of S&P 500 companies trading above their 200-Day Simple Moving Average (SMA). Below I charted the S&P over the past 20 years and annotated some of the most egregious Feds machinations.

Wait a minute! Wait. Wait.
I’m having a thought.
Oh yes. Oh yes.
I’m going to have a thought.
It’s coming. It’s coming…
It’s gone.

– Big Boy Caprice (Movie: Dick Tracy)

Recession Man Cometh?

Jerome Powell

What is happening to the doom and gloom of the looming recession? “Worse than the 1932s by the end of 2022,” I heard early last year. “2023 is going to look a lot like 1973-74,” came another late 2022 prognostication. Now the prediction is to expect the recession to have a big impact during the second half of 2023. There seems to be big talk about how the Feds are rubbing-out the US economy.

Commentary Contents

S&P 500 Corporations

The S&P 500 is a stock market index that tracks the 500 largest companies in the U.S. This index represents about 80% of all the capitalization in the country. And the S&P is widely considered the best indicator of how all the U.S. markets are performing. This month’s Journal commentary will review a new chartable index – tracking the number of S&P 500 companies trading above their 200-Day Simple Moving Average (SMA).

200-Day Simple Moving Average (SMA)

When a corporation’s stock trades above its 200-Day SMA, it is in an uptrend and has positive momentum. This means that the economic environment for this corporation is strong and growing. And when most of the S&P 500 corporations are trading above their 200-Day SMA, then the nation’s economic outlook is reassuring. If the S&P 500 is doing well, then our 401Ks are likely going well – as well.

$SPXA200R Index

Below is a chart showing how many of the S&P 500 Corporations had their stocks traded above their 200-Day SMA over the last year. A couple of times from June to October, more than 80% of the S&P 500 was struggling, and their stock was trading below their 200-Day SMA.

I found this $SPXA200R index that I can chart in ThinkorSwim. This index shows how many of the large-cap S&P 500 Corporations are currently trading above their 200-Day SMA.

The good news, from the lows in October 2022, more and more corporations have been back on the incline, and a bonafide recovery seems to be on its way. Today, more than 65% of all the corporations in the S&P 500 are now trading above their 200-Day SMA.

Free Markets

The intrinsic nature of the markets is to rise (see How To Make Loss Resistant Vertical Spreads – Market Force). So if we could leave the Markets alone, they should consistently perform. But the Markets can be easily manipulated by malicious individuals or unprincipled corporations. So we need Federal rules to help secure and ensure free trade in the Markets. BUT…

Inept Federal action or a geopolitical catastrophe somewhere in the world will pull the rug out from global markets (most typically, it’s the inept Feds). And for these past three years, I point my boney finger at the Feds.

The Fed’s Rub-Out

Below I charted the $SPXA200R over the past 20 years and annotated some of the most egregious Feds machinations:

The massive 2020 COVID lockdown was a mistake, and the over stimuli of the economy in 2021 is another. The lockdowns shuttered manufacturing. The enormous stimulus packages allowed nonproducing consumers to buy up available supplies. As a result, inventories flipped, supply chains crashed, and the rebuilding of supply has raised prices to near untenable levels.


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This Week’s Market Sentiment

This Market Sentiment Section is typically completed by midday Monday morning. By the time this journal is published, it will be mostly old news.

(As of 02/24/2023)

This section reviews four indicators:

Then, I will use these indicators to help guide my trading decisions for this week.

Each of my four indicators will “vote” on a DEFCON (Damocles Options Trading Readiness Signal) level, exclusive to that indicator. Then, In the final sub-section, “My sentiment for this coming week,” below, I’ll compile the votes into a DEFCON level for the week.

Ecopolitical Influencers

Ecopolitical (Sociopolitical-Economics) Influencers (EPIs) can be breaking news, political machinations, Federal Reserve musings, or even Twitter Trends. They are events that can abruptly change the dynamics of the current markets. U.S. political polarization’s impact on Wall Street cannot be glossed over.

EPIs are like a lit fuse to a bomb. The fuse can be fast or slow, and the bomb can easily be a dud. But I need to watch this closely as an indicator. The EPIs can significantly disrupt all the other indicators at the drop of a tweet.


Yikes – Yawns – Yays


Geopolitical

Socioeconomics 

EPI votes a DEFCON 3


Market Sustainability

This is a revamped section inspired by the “Kenny Rogers” strategy.

The VIX is an emotion gauge for the general investing population. It is thought to be driven by the Marketeers’ current level of greed or fear. As one-month forward-looking volatility, it is not designed to tell us in which direction the market will move but rather if the current trajectory is sustainable.

If the VIX is below 20% (better yet, below 15%), then there is not much speculation about the future of the current market’s trajectory.

Put Options are frequently used as protection against existing investments falling. When the ratio rises, this indicates that the Marketeers believe a market decline is imminent.

If the S&P Put/Call Ratio is below 0.75, then there is a reasonable belief that the markets will rise.

ThinkorSwim Chart: CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX) – 02/21/202
ThinkorSwim Chart: S&P 500 Put/Call Ratio – as of 02/21/2023

The 4-week trajectory of the VIX Regression Channel takes a turn towards high volatility:

  • VIX spent most of last week above 20%, ending at 22%
  • The current VIX is above the 9-Day SMA
  • The 9-Day SMA is still below the 50-Day SMA
  • The VIX’s Thrashing has been higher over the past 30 days.

The Put/Call Ratio for the S&P 500 index mellowed through Febuary:

  • The S&P 500’s Put/Call Ratio ended the week barely in the “Good Shape” region
  • The P/C Ratio ended last week at .71
  • The 9-Day SMA fell below the 1.0 line (0.97), which still suggests market pessimism

Market volatility is inching higher as it has risen above the 20% line for the past two weeks. But the mild Put/Call Ratio over the past month suggests that the Marketeers are not too worried about rising volatility. However, a rising VIX is like a shortening fuse – it may not take much to set the Marketeers off. With the Feds meeting nigh, and the boost in Retail Sales being counterintuitive to the Feds inflation action, I’m putting caution first.

Market Sustainability votes a cautious DEFCON 3

Investors’ Sentiment

Marketeers are consumers too. And when the economy is humming, investments are smoking. Conversely, when the economy is threatening their portfolios, they tend to run for cover.

Consumer Sentiment Index

A low Consumer Sentiment Index is a general dissatisfaction with our current management of U.S. economic policies. This dissatisfaction will imply that something has to change. A high satisfaction rating suggests approval of the current policy management and implies market stability. Surveys of Consumers (umich.edu)

Consumer Sentiment Index as of 02/16/2022

February’s preliminaries continue the Dec/Jan bounce with another 2.3% jump.

Misery Index

With the copious amount of economic pressures throughout the nation this past year (inflation, employment, interest rates, etc.), knowing what the Misery Index is and what direction the index is moving can cast a long shadow on Marketeer’s sentiment. Numbers are coming from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov).

1 A year ago (Dec 2021), inflation was already sky-high at 7.0%. So being at 6.5% now means that we are actually up by 13.5% over the past two years (Biden’s Administration).

The Misery Index continues to be high as nearly half of all consumers believe our economy is moving in the wrong direction. But the temperature of our economy appears to be moving lower as our consumers start to regain confidence in our economic trajectory. The Misery Index fell below 10% for the first time.

I’m optimistic that we are now moving in the right direction but not so much to give this a DEFCON 3.

CSI votes an optimistic DEFCON 2

Market Trajectories

The S&P 500 is a stock market index that tracks the 500 largest companies in the U.S. This index represents about 80% of all the capitalization in the country. The S&P is widely considered the best indicator of how all the U.S. markets are performing.

The Russell 2000 Index is commonly considered an indicator of the U.S. economic direction due to its focus on small-cap companies. The growth potential of small-cap stocks is attractive to Marketeers when economic expansion is expected. These same small-cap stocks are also the first to be jettisoned at the start of economic turmoil.

S&P 500 (SPX) = 4,029 – up 1.2% from 3,973 last month.
Russell 2000 (RUT) = 1,910 – up 2.3% from 1,867 last month.

ThinkorSwim Chart: Daily S&P 500 Index
Four/Two Months Trend (Updated 01/22/2023)
ThinkorSwim Chart: Daily Russell 2000 Index
Four/Two Months Trend (Updated 02/21/2023)

Market Performance

The end-of-year market downturn is because, I believe, the Marketeers selling to lock in cap-gains losses for taxes (I know I did that). But once 2023 ranged in, many went on a buying spree to pick up discounted assets. The past 20 days has been a sharp reversal of the December selloff, hopefully, to but the trajectories mack into a longer-term bull.

Both indexes had a strong two-month recovery, despite the turndown over the last two weeks. The 50-Day moving above the 200-Day SMAs is a good sign of an inflationary recovery.

Market Index votes a DEFCON 3

My sentiment for this coming week:

Of the four indicators:

Both the S&P 500 and Russel 2000 indexes had a two-month solid recovery, and their 50-Day moving above the 200-Day SMAs is a good sign of an inflationary recovery (despite the turndown over the last two) as the Marketeers appear to be getting back into the higher-risk, small-cap stocks. But the VIX is rising pretty fast as new Fed actions are about to be announced. So this may be the calm before the storm or a sign that Spring is nigh. I am cautiously positive.

Trading Readiness Level for this week

cautious DEFCON 3

This Week’s Guidance

Inflation seemed to have peaked, and the market’s trajectories are weak-knee, long-term bullish. But the short-term trajectories (20 and 7 days) tell a different story. The RSI for SPX is below 50 and falling, suggesting that the current downturn could continue. Even though we are at a DEFCON 3, the short-term economic outlook seems sketchy.







Profit and Loss Statements

(As of 02/24/23)

My Performance vs. SPY

Hypothetically, instead of depositing $28,000 in my Options Trading Account, could I have done better if I bought $28,000 of the ETF/SPY instead?

Options Trading
Account
SPY
(Fictional)
Initial Investment
(As of Jan 4, 2022)
$20,000.00
(Cash)
$20,000.00
(52.2972 shares @ $382.43)
Funds Added$258.61
(Premiums, Int., Div.)
0.23 shares
(Dividends Reinvested)
Funds Removed-$14.20
(Early Close & Fees)
-$0.00
(Fractional Shares Sold)
Market Changes-$340.59
(Open Spreads’ Fair Market Value )
$842.51
(Gain/Loss)
Ending Balance$20,105.05
(Mark-To-Market)
$20,842.51
(52.2972 shares @ $398.54 CV)
ROI0.5%4.2%
As of 02/21/2023, 10:00 AM







Schedule for this Week

Goals for this week: (02/21/2023 – 02/24/2023) (Week #8)

Monday:

Tuesday – Thursday:

Friday:

This Month’s Trade Activity

(As of 02/24/2023)

Volatility was too high, and the ETSs were too intense to feel comfortable if the markets could sustain any one direction for the length of time. I should have come to this position back in March.

Spread Count Summary:

Year
2023
Month
Feb
Week
#
8
Vertical Bull Put Credit Spreads930
Vertical Bear Call Credit Spreads000
Iron Condors000
Total930

Current Dollars at Risk:

Year
202
3
Month
Feb
Week
#
8
Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread$7,239.$4,352.$0.
Vertical Bear Call Credit Spread$0.$0.$0.
Iron Condor$0.$0.$0.
Total Dollar Risk$7,239.$4,352.$0.
Max Risk Allowed$20,000.N/A$2,500.

Note: no new Spreads this week.

Options Buying Power:

Unallocated dollars available to open new Vertical Credit Spreads:

Current Cash Balance$20,446
Set-Aside Dollars for Existing Spreads$12,000
Cash Available for New Spreads$8,46
(Options Buying Power)







Vertical Spreads Opened This Month

(01/30/2023 – 02/24/2023)

No Vertical Spreads were opened in week #8. The 20-day and 7-day trajectories for all ETFs were strongly bearish, the Put/Call Ratio for all was above 1, and the IV% was rising. Following the advice of Kenny Rogers, I decided not to play this week.

DIA:315p/305p/X1 – Open 02/13/22 – Expires 03/31/23 – Max Gain = $74.00 – Open Price = 341.23
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 84.4%, Headroom= 7.7%, Max Loss= $926, AROR= 62.6%

ThinkorSwim Chart: Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread – DIA – Short Strike: 315p – Long Strike: 305p

Check (✔) rule passed.

Unfriendly SpreadRisky SpreadFriendly Spread
DEFCON1 or 23 ✔4 or 5
Underlying’s Put/Call Ratio> 1 < 1.0 ✔< 0.75
Underlying’s IV%> 50%25% – 50%< 25% ✔
VIX >25% 18% – 25% ✔< 18%
Cur Valbelow 9-Day SMAabove 9-Day SMA ✔
9-Day SMAbelow 50-Day SMAabove 50-Day SMA ✔
50-Day SMAbelow 200-Day SMAabove 200-Day SMA ✔
20-Day Regression Linebearishflat (± 1)bullish ✔
60-Day Trend Channelbearish bullish ✔
14-Day RSIabove 60 between 40-60 ✔below 40
Strike Width20+10 – 205 – 10 ✔
Short Strike Prob OTM> 100%> 90%75% – 85% ✔
# Spreads per Week01 – 2 ✔2 or more

This is the first “Friendly” Vertical Spread of the year.

DIA:300p/280p/X1 – Open 02/08/22 – Expires 03/31/23 – Max Gain = $58.00 – Open Price = 340.19
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 91.4%, Headroom= 11.9%, Max Loss= $1,943, AROR= 20.6%

ThinkorSwim Chart: Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread – DIA – Short Strike: 300p – Long Strike: 280p

Check (✔) rule passed.

Unfriendly SpreadRisky SpreadFriendly Spread
DEFCON1 or 23 ✔4 or 5
Underlying’s Put/Call Ratio> 1 ✔< 1.0 < 0.75
Underlying’s IV%> 50%25% – 50%< 25% ✔
VIX >25% 18% – 25% ✔< 18%
Cur Valbelow 9-Day SMAabove 9-Day SMA ✔
9-Day SMAbelow 50-Day SMAabove 50-Day SMA ✔
50-Day SMAbelow 200-Day SMAabove 200-Day SMA ✔
20-Day Regression Linebearishflat (± 1)bullish ✔
60-Day Trend Channelbearish ✔bullish
7-Day RSIabove 60 ✔between 40-60 ✔below 40
Strike Width20+10 – 20 ✔5 – 10
Short Strike Prob OTM> 100%> 90% ✔75% – 85%
# Spreads per Week01 – 2 ✔2 or more

QQQ:260p/245p/X1 – Open 02/03/22 – Expires 03/03/23 – Max Gain = $17.00 – Open Price = 310.61
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 96.9%, Headroom= 16.3%, Max Loss= $1,483, AROR= 14.1%

ThinkorSwim Chart: Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread – QQQ – Short Strike: 260p – Long Strike: 245p

Check (✔) rule passed.

Unfriendly SpreadRisky SpreadFriendly Spread
DEFCON1 or 23 ✔4 or 5
Underlying’s Put/Call Ratio> 1 ✔< 1.0 < 0.75
Underlying’s IV%> 50%25% – 50%< 25% ✔
VIX >25% 18% – 25% ✔< 18%
Cur Valbelow 9-Day SMAabove 9-Day SMA ✔
9-Day SMAbelow 50-Day SMAabove 50-Day SMA ✔
50-Day SMAbelow 200-Day SMA ✔above 200-Day SMA
20-Day Regression Linebearishflat (± 1)bullish ✔
60-Day Trend Channelbearish ✔bullish
7-Day RSIabove 60 ✔between 40-60below 40
Strike Width20+10 – 20 ✔5 – 10
Short Strike Prob OTM> 100%> 90% ✔75% – 85%
# Spreads per Week01 – 2 ✔2 or more

This is a rolled position (from 235p/200p) (Transaction # 10). QQQ has been moving aggressively bullish for the past 3 weeks, plus this new rolled position has a better Prob-OTM and headroom over the original with the same risk/expiration date.

The original Spread yielded me $45 in premiums but cost me $4.00 to close early. This rolled Spread gave me $17.00. So, for the same risk and same time, instead of making $45.00, I made ($45 – $4 + $17) = $62.00 (minus $2 for fees).

DIA:305p/290p/X1 – Open 01/31/22 – Expires 03/17/23 – Max Gain = $51.00 – Open Price = 338.87
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 90.6%, Headroom= 10.0%, Max Loss= $1,449, AROR= 28.0%

ThinkorSwim Chart: Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread – DIA – Short Strike: 305p – Long Strike: 290p

Check (✔) rule passed.

Unfriendly SpreadRisky SpreadFriendly Spread
DEFCON1 or 23 ✔4 or 5
Underlying’s Put/Call Ratio> 1 ✔< 1.0 < 0.75
Underlying’s IV%> 50%25% – 50%< 25% ✔
VIX >25% 18% – 25% ✔< 18%
Cur Valbelow 9-Day SMAabove 9-Day SMA ✔
9-Day SMAbelow 50-Day SMAabove 50-Day SMA ✔
50-Day SMAbelow 200-Day SMAabove 200-Day SMA ✔
20-Day Regression Linebearish ✔flat (± 1)bullish
60-Day Trend Channelbearishbullish ✔
7-Day RSIabove 60between 40-60 ✔below 40
Strike Width20+10 – 20 ✔5 – 10
Short Strike Prob OTM> 100%> 90% ✔75% – 85%
# Spreads per Week01 – 2 ✔2 or more

Vertical Spreads Currently Cooking

(As of 02/24/2023)

SPY:350p/335p/X1 – Open 01/26/22 – Expires 03/17/23 – Max Gain = $45.00 – Open Price = 402.01
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 92.4%, Headroom= 13.0%, Max Loss= $1,455, AROR= 22.1%

DIA:300p/285p/X1 – Open 01/24/22 – Expires 03/17/23 – Max Gain = $54.00 – Open Price = 336.24
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 90.8%, Headroom= 10.8%, Max Loss= $1,446, AROR= 25.7%

SPY:360p/345p/X1 – Open 01/18/22 – Expires 03/03/23 – Max Gain = $59.00 – Open Price = 399.85
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 90.5%, Headroom= 10.0%, Max Loss= $1,441, AROR= 33.4%

DIA:310p/295p/X1 – Open 01/18/22 – Expires 03/03/23 – Max Gain = $52.00 – Open Price = 340.10
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 90.4%, Headroom= 8.8%, Max Loss= $1,448, AROR=29.2%







Vertical Spreads Closed This Month

(As of 02/24/2023)

QQQ:235p/220p/X1 – Open 01/13/22 – Expires 03/03/23 – Max Gain = $45.00 – Open Price = 277.98
(Vertical Bull Put Credit Spread)
At Open: Prob. OTM= 93.0%, Headroom= 15.5%, Max Loss= $1,455, AROR=22.5%
At Close: Prob. OTM=99.0%, Headroom= 24.4%

Income to open: $0.45 premium collected * 100 shares * 1 contracts = $45.00
Cost to close: $0.04 premium paid * 100 shares * 1 contracts = $4.00 (closed 28 days early)
Net Profit = $45.00 to open – $4.00 to close – $2.00 fees = $39.00
AROR = ($39.00 / 21 days in play) * 365 / $1,455 = 46.0%

I rolled this position to 260p/245p (same expiration date). This transaction represents a 46% return on my risk over the 22.5% I was expecting.

Conclusion

Can selling options for income be considered a Home Business? Can I make money at home by selling Vertical Bull Put Credit Options Spreads? These are questions that I am trying to answer for myself.

My Options Trading activities include cover calls, cash-secure puts, Vertical Spreads, and other options strategies. Cover calls and cash puts assume that I already have a sizable portfolio and accumulated cash to generate a meaningful income. But short-term Vertical Spreads do not require a substantial cash investment to make some fun money. – This blog’s sole focus is short-term Vertical Spreads.

This blog is my Options Trading Journal. I will record my weekly Option Contracts buys and sells in hopes of gaining experience.

Experience is the ability to recognize that
I’m about to make the same mistake again.

-Damocles

Disclaimer

Even though I have tried to make it clear that this blog is my personal trading journal, it has been suggested by others that I, nevertheless, include a general disclaimer. So here goes…

“This blog and the information contained herein is not intended to be a source of advice or analysis concerning the material presented. The information and/or documents contained in the blog do not constitute investment advice.”

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