For the third time within the past
four sessions, morning strength faded in the afternoon, causing the major
indices to finish near their intraday lows. The S&P 500, Nasdaq
Composite, and Dow Jones Industrial Average each lost 0.1%, after giving up
early gains of 0.3%, 0.5%, and 0.2% respectively. Small and mid-cap stocks
bounced from their positions of relative weakness, causing the Russell 2000 to
gain 0.4% and the S&P Midcap 400 to advance 0.1%. Prior to the middle of this
month, the major indices had a tendency to recover from morning weakness and
finish near their intraday highs. However, we have seen the opposite pattern in
three out of the past four trading days. Although the S&P and Dow remain
indecisive and range-bound, this tells us the bears may be starting to gain the
upper hand. In the Nasdaq, the weakness has been more apparent.
Total volume in the NYSE declined by 12%, while volume in the
Nasdaq was 11% lighter than the previous day's level. Despite the losses in the
S&P and Nasdaq, market internals finished slightly positive. In both exchanges,
advancing volume exceeded declining volume by a ratio of 1.2 to 1. Obviously,
the ratios were much higher in the morning. It's positive that turnover declined
as stocks reversed to the downside intraday, but bear in mind that volume is
likely to continue declining until the holiday season has concluded. Next
Monday, the stock market is closed in observance of Christmas Day, and volume
will probably dry up over the next two sessions as well. Traditionally, the week
between Christmas and New Year's Day is also rather slow, so we would not be
surprised if the major indices remain stuck in a range until the beginning of
the new year.
If you were positioned in any of the ProShares ETFs going into
yesterday morning, you may have been a bit surprised to see each of them gap
down significantly on the open. Despite a relatively flat open in both the
Nasdaq 100 and the S&P Midcap 400 indices, our long positions in the UltraShort
QQQQ (QID | news | PowerRating | PR Charts ) and the UltraShort S&P Midcap (MZZ | news | PowerRating | PR Charts ) each opened significantly
lower. After researching the issue, we realized that the large discrepancies
were the result of annual dividend and capital gains distributions in the entire
family of ETFs. Just like an individual stock, all ETFs are required to
distribute income payments, while some distribute capital gains as well. When
that happens, the price of the ETF is adjusted lower to compensate for the
subsequent cash distribution. However, most ETFs pay dividends on a quarterly
basis, whereas the new ProShares ETFs are currently paying on an annual
basis. The difference is that the price adjustment in the price of the ProShares
ETFs is much more significant and noticeable than with an ETF that makes regular
quarterly distributions.
When you are short an ETF that makes a dividend distribution,
the price of the ETF will gap lower by the amount of the distribution, but the
amount of the dividend distribution will be debited out of your brokerage
account. The net result is no change in your bottom line. Given that our QID and
MZZ positions are inversely correlated to their respective market indices,
buying them is basically the same as selling short QQQQ or MDY (albeit with 2 to
1 leverage). As such, we assumed these ETFs would gap higher, not lower,
when they traded ex-dividend yesterday. We would then expect the usual debit of
the dividend payment from the brokerage account. Seeking clarification, we
contacted ProShares and were informed that, even though they are inversely
correlated ETFs, dividend payments are still credited, rather than debited,
which explains why they gapped down yesterday. When dividends are distribution
on December 27, they will be equal to the per share amount of the discrepancy in
trading price yesterday, but it artificially skews our stop prices and
profit/loss for our open positions in the meantime. MZZ technically hit our stop
price because of the ex-dividend adjusted price, but no downside occurred
because the amount of the gap down will be paid to all shareholders next week.
For details on the exact amounts of the dividend payments for the ProShares ETFs,
check out this link on their website. On that page, you can also read the
"Distributions Q&A" by clicking on the link on the top right side of the web
page.
In the four years that we have been analyzing ETFs and
providing detailed trade setups, this is the first time where the ex-dividend
adjusted price of an ETF was ever significant enough to make a difference in our
stop or target prices. To deal with this unusual scenario, we have adjusted our
stop and target prices to reflect the dividend payment, and will subsequently
include the amount of the dividend distribution in our "official" performance
report when the trade is closed. Going into the new year, we have also realized
the need for a new set of guidelines that account for the price adjustments on
ETFs that happen to distribute dividends and/or capital gains while we are
positioned in them. Otherwise, our performance reporting will become inaccurate
as more ETFs are introduced. Regular subscribers will be notified as soon as the
new guidelines have been added into our User Guide.
As for the broad market analysis, there's not much new to
report going into today. The Nasdaq remains below its primary uptrend line that
it broke on Tuesday, while both the S&P and Dow are holding near their highs. We
will provide an updated view on the industry sector performance in the beginning
of next week. Like we mentioned, turnover is likely to decline in the coming
days, and stay that way until the new year begins. As such, now is a good time
to put together or revise your trading plan for the new year.
NOTE: The U.S. stock markets will be closed on Monday,
December 25, in observance of Christmas Day.
The Wagner Daily
will not be published that day, but regular publication will resume on Tuesday.
Have a great holiday weekend with your friends and family!
Open ETF positions:
Long QID, GLD, MZZ, short IYT (regular subscribers to
The Wagner Daily
receive detailed stop and target prices on open positions and detailed setup
information on new ETF trade entry prices. Intraday e-mail alerts are also sent
as needed.)
Deron Wagner is the head trader of Morpheus Capital
Hedge Fund and founder of Morpheus Trading Group (morpheustrading.com),
which he launched in 2001. Wagner appears on his best-selling video, Sector
Trading Strategies (Marketplace Books, June 2002), and is co-author of both The
Long-Term Day Trader (Career Press, April 2000) and The After-Hours Trader
(McGraw Hill, August 2000). Past television appearances include CNBC, ABC, and
Yahoo! FinanceVision. He is also a frequent guest speaker at various trading and
financial conferences around the world. For a free trial to the full version of
The Wagner Daily or to learn about Deron's other services, visit
morpheustrading.com or send an e-mail to
deron@morpheustrading.com .