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Thursday, June 27, 2019

Patience Leads to Profit When Day Trading

Money can be made on the market going up and down daily especially with options. There were sharp movements today with Boeing, JP Morgan and Home Depot. I tend to stick with these few stocks because they have decent daily movement and you can profit nicely with as little as $500.

Boeing

Boeing had more news over night as the FAA found another problem that needed to be addressed with their max airplane before being allowed to fly again. The stock moved sharply down almost 10 points from Wednesday's close. It popped at open, went down, came up a little and retested that low before rising up for most of the day. It had a sharp move up around noon as shown in a 1 minute chart.

What I have noticed it that when it has a sharp move up, it make get another move higher, but will have a sharp move downward by the end of the day. That is exactly what happened at 3:45pm when it was announced that Southwest Airlines is canceling their order of the max jet. This is too late in the day to expect to happen, but it has shown to happen multiple times in the past month. You could look at Wednesday's chart when it was moving up and then sold off in the afternoon. If only you held those afternoon puts until Thursday. But we don't do that when day trading options because it could have easily had good news that moved it up to 390 similar to what happened with the banks today. I drew up some notes on a chart for you to study.

JP Morgan

Today's movement with JP Morgan was similar to yesterday, but quite different in the pattern. To start the day, JP Morgan opened higher than yesterday's close. There might have been a moment near open when you could have bought calls, but I don't like it because there was no guarantee that it wasn't going lower as a retest. It ran straight up, topped and sharply moved downward. The move offered no retest of the peak and no retest of the lower areas as it moved sharply up from the bottom. I did not trade these movements because they did not show good entry points for day trades.

The afternoon high was not as high as the morning, but it did show that it was peaking around 109.30 as it moved downward before coming back to that area. When it was at 109.24 I bought 109 puts at an average cost of .43. I went to the bathroom while monitoring the stock on my phone and saw it went slightly higher for the second peak at 109.36. Unlike yesterday, I did not lose 10 cents an option this time. This was true mainly because I bought 109 puts that were closer to being in the money compared to yesterday when I bought 108 puts that were still 50 cents out of the money in the afternoon.

I was not worried because every time JP Morgan touched 109.36, it went down quickly and did not hold that price. After the second time, the stock started falling. I bought 3 more when it was at 109.31 at .41. I was hoping to be able to sell these options for .8 or .9, but realizing that they expire tomorrow, I knew the premium was going to decrease based on the less time to expiration. I decided to target my exit based on the morning drop and utilizing the Pivot Point of 108.65 from my trading software that displayed the Pivot Point.

Sure enough, JP Morgan made it to the Pivot Point of 108.65 which was slightly higher than the morning low. At this point my put options appeared to have topped out at .70. I placed my limit order for .75 and lowered to .72, but the stock appeared to make a reversal, so I finally got it sold for .69 which created a profit of $320 on my 13 contracts.

That might have been a good point to buy calls for the next day if I did not mind holding options over night. But that is not what I do. JP Morgan moved sharply to 108.90 before closing around 108.80 and those options would have been worth around .60. After the close, the Federal Reserve announce the results of their stress test and JP Morgan along with all of the other US banks moved upwards big time. JP Morgan moved almost 2 points higher. They also announce dividends and stock buy backs.

Friday Expectations

As we enter the weekend of the G20 summit and escalation of trade meetings, the market should open higher on optimism and on the back of the great bank news. It would be awesome if the market would close on the highs of the day, but given that it is also that last day of the quarter, we might see an afternoon sell off that drops us just above the flat line. We might not have a sell off, but just because Alphabet is near it's low point for the week doesn't mean it will automatically head higher and stay there. Buying expiring options is dangerous on Friday, but as long as you are making sure they are in the money, you can make money doing it. Buying options for next week is a safer bet and does not require you to buy so close to being in the money to make profit.

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