OptionsMentoring.com
Free Stock Option Trading Articles & Resources
Free Stock Option DVD
OptionsMentoring.com
Front Page 
 
 Stock Option Basics
 
 Call Options
 
 Put Options
 
 Stock Option Pricing
 
 Advanced Stock Option Strategies
 
 Trading Psychology
 
 CBOE Updates
 
 International Securities Exchange (ISE)
 
 Company Commentary
 
 Options News
News Feed
Search

Content Management by interactivetools.com.


Company Commentary Last Updated: Jul 14, 2008 - 6:40:02 AM


Financial Stocks Get Lift

By Rick Rouse
Jul 14, 2008 - 6:32:38 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Over the weekend, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department announced a plan to help hurting mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM, $10.25, down $2.95) and Freddie Mac (FRE, $7.75, down $0.25). I can name quite a few stocks, and we've witnessed them here in the blog, that have lost 70%-80% of their values but they should get a big bounce today.

Lehman Brothers Holdings (LEH, $14.43, down $2.87) continues to commit highway robbery. There's no other way to explain it. It was exactly one month ago I mentioned the company had raised $6 billion through an offering of common and preferred stock. What was the name of that analyst who "upgraded" Lehman on the eve of the offering priced at $28? The stock was $30 at the time.

Merrill Lynch (MER, $27.61, down $1.10) hit a new 52-week low of $26.50. Merrill's high? 89 bucks. Merrill is set to raise capital (after saying new funds weren't needed) as it expects the write down for its 2Q could exceed $6 billion. I mentioned Merrill was selling stakes in Bloomberg and BlackRock (BLK, $174.71, up $1.76) which are considered two of the largest holdings of the firm. Merrill has their fingers in other pies that aren't as lucrative but these investments could also produce some much-needed capital.

We set stops on the Merrill Lynch July 32.50 puts (MERSA, $5.20, up $0.75) at $4.50 on Friday and this will probably get hit this morning. Either way we should net a great return from an entry price of $2.15 on 6/30. Merrill should trade higher due to the Fannie and Freddie news.

Wachovia (WB, $11.54, down $1.59) and Citigroup (C, $16.19, down 0.09) also set new lows Friday and they should rebound too. Even Goldman Sachs (GS, $162.48, down $7.68) was starting to have its armor chinked at.

Hopefully this is not another smoke-and-mirror show to fix something that can't be fixed. We should get a clearer picture this week as dozens of financial institutions report 2Q results which are widely expected to be awful. What this news really means though is that our tax money could be used by the government as "we" help bail out Fannie and Freddie. The call options for both should zoom today. Keep an eye on Fannie's July 10 calls (NJWGJ) which closed at $2.45. Freddie's July 10 calls (FREGB) closed at 80 cents.

Although both are saying they don't need to raise money at the moment, the funds are there in case they do. The rally this morning will be due to the short-covering from those who have shorted these stocks. Let's see how much off a rebound we get and how much is due to short-covering. Either way you slice it, the fundamentals for these companies still don't change. A $6 billion loss is a $6 biilion loss in the case for Merrill.

Rick Rouse
Rick@OptionsMentoring.com


© Copyright 2008 by OptionsMentoring.com



Top of Page

Company Commentary
Latest Headlines
Watch List: Biotech Stocks
Get on the Imax Bus
Financial Stocks Get Lift
The New "Four Horsemen"
AMEX MEMBERS APPROVE ACQUISITION OF AMEX BY NYSE
Rumblings and Grumblings
Sector Watch: Shipping Stocks
Deal Or No Deal?
Google's Gigantic Gain
Microsoft Puts the Pressure on Yahoo