It's fashionable in certain circles to talk about having a Canadian escape plan if shit gets too weird here in the United States.
I'm not one of those. Though I love Canada, having grown up across the border in Buffalo, NY.
There were many times in my younger days, while spending a day across the border, where I'd find myself short on cash and I'd have to hit an ATM to get some loonies! And most often, those ATMs were run by CIBC.
So maybe I should attempt to earn back some of those ATM fees (plus interest!).
Here's this week's crypto roundup. It's an opportunity for us to take a step back, set aside the distractions, and delve into the key charts shaping the crypto complex.
I get it. The yen was cast as the villain decades ago, and something or someone must take the blame for the VIX hitting 65 earlier this week.
While I prefer to point my finger at the preceding low-volatility environment, the November election, and potential rate cuts, the yen certainly played a part.
But the real question isn’t who, what, when, where, or why.
Instead, every investor wants to know…Was that it?
Is the selloff over?
I think the worst is behind us.
Here’s why…
Check out the USD/JPY chart with a 200-day simple moving average in bright blue (with the percentage above or below the long-term average in the lower pane):
In many ways the yen carry trade is a play on interest rates.
Notice the USD/JPY rocketed higher as the current hiking cycle began, rising with the widening spread between the Japan and US overnight rates. Powell’s war on inflation and Japan’s Yield Curve...
A surprising outcome for some of my defined-risk long delta trades this week is that my losses weren’t as pronounced as I would’ve expected given the vicious sell-off we’ve seen in many tech names.
Why?
One thing that isn’t often discussed about being long options premium when expressing bullish or bearish bets is that owning long options (calls or puts) also means we’re long volatility.
In situations like these where we saw VIX briefly with a 65-handle, the rapid rise in options premiums put a floor in many of the calls I had long positions in. So while many bullish positions in my portfolio were losing money, the losses were rather pedestrian relative to what others who were holding long stock or futures positions were likely experiencing.
It’s not a win, but it felt like one this week.
We discuss this and a whole lot more in this week’s Options Jam Session:
The most significant insider buy on today’s list comes via a Form 4 filing by Blue Star Exploration Corp, which purchased $21 million worth of Comstock Resources $CRK.
Control Empresarial de Capitales S.A. continues to buy shares of PBF Energy Inc $PBF and Talos Energy Inc $TALO.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from August 7, 2024:
The CEOs of Intel Corporation $INTC and Vimeo Inc $VMEO both filed Form 4s revealing purchases of their own stock.
Impactive Capital filed a 13D for Marriott Vacations Worldwide Corporation $VAC revealing an increase in ownership from 7.42% to 8.60%.
Director Pauline Richards bought 2,351 shares in Apollo Global Management $APO.
APO has entered a corrective phase, falling almost 25% off its highs in the last few weeks.
The stock market likely has a couple of aftershocks left in it. But if the worst is over, I have to believe this is a great opportunity to buy the dip in some names that will be beneficiaries of the AI boom.
And there are few bigger and well-positioned names than Microsoft.
This market environment still demands that we define our risks and we're going to leverage elevated volatility in a way you might not expect to express our bet.