DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login

This Once-in-a-Lifetime Trade Is Open This Week Only
By Tom Dyson
October 15, 2008

Today is Wednesday, October 15, 2008. This information will be worthless in less than a week. Act on it now... or never. Let me explain why you should be in such a hurry...

You're on a deep-sea fishing boat. The sun is out, there's almost no breeze, and the ocean's surface is so glassy you can see your reflection in the water.

You notice a cloud in the distance. It grows and blackens, and it starts to rain. It gets windy and the waves pick up. Now the whole sky is black, and there's a gale blowing. White caps cover the ocean, and waves throw spray over the bow.

The gale becomes a hurricane. Wave heights hit 60 feet. Over the radio, you hear a containership has lost some containers overboard. The hurricane intensifies. Now it's a category five and wind speeds are setting new records at NOAA...

The largest wave ever recorded by scientific instruments was 100 feet high off the coast of Scotland. Your fishing boat is riding over 100-foot waves every few minutes. The rogue waves are as high as 150 feet.

More news comes over the radio. A passenger ship has sunk. Everyone onboard is presumed drowned. Five oil tankers and three massive iron-ore ships have also sunk. The coast guard is doing everything it can. But no one knows what resources it has... or how effective these resources will be in this gargantuan storm.

So here's the question. Would you prefer to bet on the damage to the shipping industry... or would you prefer to bet on next month's weather being better than it is right now?

I don't know how many ships are going down in the hurricane. But when I see 150-foot waves and oil tankers sinking, I know the weather can't get any worse. The certain bet is that the storm will pass, the sun will shine, and the waves will calm down.

This is the situation we have in the stock market right now. It's a category five hurricane. Last week was the worst week for stocks in the history of American capitalism. The storm has sunk our largest institutions and damaged dozens more.

It's hard to know how many stocks will founder in the end. So I don't want to make a call on the stock market. To make an easy profit in this crisis, I recommend you bet on an improvement in stock-market weather.

The VIX index measures the volatility in the S&P 500. The VIX is an index... like the Dow Jones or the S&P... except it measures the price of option contracts traded on stocks in the S&P. When the VIX is low, it means there's good weather in the stock market. Market movements are small, investors are calm, and the business news is boring. When the VIX is high, it means there's a storm in the stock market. Option sellers are charging high prices to write option contracts. They need the extra premium to compensate them for the risk of huge fluctuations.

Take a look at the chart below. When there's good weather in the stock market, the VIX trades between 10 and 15... like we saw in the mid-1990s. When the hurricane season comes around, the VIX trades between 25 and 40. Its average over the last 18 years is 22.39.

Volatility Index - New Methodology

The VIX set an all-time high at 44.28 in August 1998 when Russia defaulted. Last week, the VIX shocked traders by first breaking 50 and then rising all the way to 75 by Friday afternoon. It was like finding a 300-foot rogue wave in the Mediterranean Sea.

To profit from this crisis, all you have to do is bet that the VIX falls.

It's easy to bet on a decline in the VIX. Most discount brokers offer options on the VIX. My favorite strategy is selling put options on stocks I'd love to own. When volatility is high, option sellers collect large option premiums. If my options get exercised, I get my favorite stocks at a big discount to today's price. If not, I simply collect a few dollars in income and try it again.

Related Articles

The Single Best Income Strategy Ever Created Just Got Better

It's Time to Take Advantage of the Fear

You should only attempt these trades if you have a solid understanding of the options market... or you trust your broker to help you set up options trades. Tell him or her that you want to "short the VIX."

No one knows how much damage this crash will do to our economy... but it's certain the weather will improve. I advise you to move fast. Stock-market storms disappear as quickly as they come. Next week, the sun will probably be shining again.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

IT'S A BEAR MARKET IN VEGAS

For most of the past three months, one of the market's few safe havens has been "the basics"... companies like Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble, and Kraft. The thinking here goes, "Folks gotta shave, brush their teeth, and eat."

From a few laughable sources, we've heard claims that gambling would also hold up well in a weak economy. The thinking here goes, "Folks will try to win back what they've lost."

Today's chart will put this claim mercifully to rest. It's a two-year look at America's largest publicly traded casino operator, Wynn Resorts. Along with fellow gambling giants Las Vegas Sands and MGM, Wynn's fortunes, earnings, and shares are plummeting. The stock is down 62% from its high.

The decline of Las Vegas is a lot like the decline of Wall Street. Both have crumbled due to a mixture of drunken speculation and wild overbuilding. And both places are filled with whores who will do anything for money. We'll take shares of Johnson & Johnson!

Wynn Resorts Ltd.

Goldman Sachs, one of the foremost bulls on commodities, turned a near-term bear on Monday after conceding that global financial turmoil would take a far bigger toll on demand than first anticipated.

"We have underestimated the depth and duration of the global financial crisis and its implications on economic growth and commodity demand," its commodity markets research team lead by Jeffrey Currie said in a report dated Oct. 13.

The bank, which has consistently been at the top of Reuters oil price polls for years, said in the report that it now expects U.S. crude oil prices to end the year at around $70 a barrel, down from a previous forecast of $115 a barrel.

"However, should the financial and evolving economic crisis cut deeper into demand, the market could fall as low as $50, which we believe to be the industry's cash cost and shut in level," the analysts wrote.

– Reuters

The global financial panic and the economic slowdown have put at least a temporary end to the commodity bull market of the last seven years, sending prices tumbling for many of the raw ingredients of the world economy.

Since the spring and early summer, when prices for many commodities peaked amid fears of permanent shortage, wheat and corn – two cereals at the base of the human food chain – have dropped more than 40 percent. Oil has dropped 44 percent. Important metals like aluminum, copper, nickel and platinum have declined by a third or more.

One theory among economists is that commodity prices are still at the beginning of a steep fall as the credit squeeze takes the world economy into a deep recession.

"When you have a seven-year bull run, you are going to have more than a four-month correction, and we are just beginning our fourth month," said Richard Feltes, senior vice president and director of commodity research at MF Global Research. "We have got more deflation coming in the housing sector, in capital assets, and it's going to continue in commodities as well."

– International Herald Tribune

An Extra $1,033 a Month from Social Security
October 14, 2008

Turn an Ordinary Dividend Into a Double- or Triple-Digit Yield
October 13, 2008

New Interview With Warren Buffett
October 11, 2008

The Man Who Predicted It... And Where We Go From Here
October 10, 2008

You Need to Consider This Crisis-Proof Investment
October 9, 2008

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2008 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202