(Options) Part 1: The Simple Basics of Stock Options Trading - Trading with the Trends - IPOs
IPOs are the simple basics of stock options trading and
a part of the market that always generates a great deal
of interest, along with stories of fabulous profits and
spectacular losses. But, there are a ways to reliably
profit on IPOs. Look for the trends that they cause and
trade with them.
IPO spinoffs are a solid basics of stock options trading
trends to work with. A company that¡¯s going to spin off a
part of itself as an IPO tends to move steadily up in price
until the IPO date, starting a week or two before that
date. On the day the IPO starts to trade, the parent
company`s stock options typically dips sharply. The best
strategy is to buy the parent once it starts moving in
anticipation of the spinoff, sell it the day before the IPO is
to begin trading, and then short the parent just after the
IPO starts to trade.
Another basics of stock options trading trend to consider
is the `quiet period` trend. The `quiet period` for IPOs is
the twenty-five days after a company goes public.
During this time, the SEC forbids the company and the
IPO`s underwriters to say anything that isn`t covered in
the company`s prospectus or final registration
statement. The underwriters face further restrictions on
issuing any research.
Another basics of stock options trading tip is that as
stocks near the ends of their quiet periods, they tend to
steadily rise in price in anticipation of the `strong buy`
recommendations most will receive from their
underwriters after the quiet period ends. The run-up
usually begins about ten days prior to the quiet period
expiration, and is often accompanied by steadily
increasing volume. It`s wise to sell quiet period stocks
the day before the recommendations come out. Why not
hold the stock options after it gets a `strong buy`
recommendation? It`s another case of buy the rumor,
sell the news. It`s also best to trade this trend with stocks
that have highly respected underwriters and are in hot
sectors.
Another basics of stock options trading play is to short
stocks with upcoming IPO lockup expirations. An IPO
lockup is a period of time, usually from six to eighteen
months, when insiders who obtained the IPO at the
offering price or less cannot sell their shares. Once this
time period has elapsed, insiders often sell their shares.
This trend is shortable because the greater the number
of shares unlocked, the more likely it is that insiders will
start to sell their shares, particularly if the market is not
doing well but the share price is still higher than the IPO
offering price. And the more shares freed, the better the
chance of a negative effect on the share price. This
trade works best when the number of shares being
unlocked is more than 25% of the current market
capitalization.
You should short the stock options roughly ten days
before the IPO lockup expiration date, since anticipation
of the event usually scares traders out of the stock
options well before its actual date. Cover the short about
five days after the expiration date. By that time, most
insiders will seem to have sold, and the news will be
priced into the stock options.
Like any other trade, these basics of stock options
trading tips are not foolproof. Often one of the
underwriters will upgrade the stock options as the
lockup expiration approaches, or the company will
release news to boost the stock options price to counter-
act the selling. Be sure to check company news closely,
since if the market is bad and share prices are down,
lockup periods may be extended.
But when the IPO market is hot, a lot of traders buy into
any new company. They commit a trading mistake
that`s like placing an overnight market order: They place
market orders for an IPO before it starts trading on its
first day, which leads to outrageous run-ups in price
right when trading opens. For the trader, these orders
are a sure way to lose money. Your order will end up
being filled at a ridiculously high price that the stock
options may never see again.
If you`re going to try to trade an IPO on its first day, don`t
place a pre opening market order. Don`t use market
orders at all. The way to buy is with a limit order after the
stock`s price has pulled back a bit and is about to
bounce and continue upward again. The goal is to buy
at the bottom of the bounce, hold it as the price rises,
and sell just as the price is about to fall again. You may
be able to do this several times, until the stock`s
momentum drops. Remember, you can`t short an IPO
during its first thirty days on the market.
If you want to hold the IPO past its first day, it`s hard to
know exactly when to jump in, but wait until after the
initial volatility has ended. The higher the IPO has
opened the less chance it has of continuing to climb
throughout the rest of the day. If the IPO has opened at
an extremely high price, it will probably sink to a fairly
stable level in an hour or two. If not, and you think the
price could go higher, you might want to buy fairly soon
after the initial volatility has ended. One option is to buy
half your shares and then wait to see whether there`s a
slump in the price later in the afternoon when you can
buy the rest for less. IPOs can be incredibly volatile, and
like with any other trade, setting stops is critical. But,
traded carefully, these basics of stock options trading
tips are a consistent way to create trading profits.
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