Players seek safety in financial ETFs, VIX rises
By
18:40 24Jul2008
CHICAGO, July 24 (Reuters) - Many cautious investors on
Thursday snapped up options tied to several exchange-traded funds tracking the
performance of the financial sector on the view that stocks in that sector
could suffer more pain.
At the same time, the decline in U.S. stocks, led by the
financials, sent the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index
<.VIX>, Wall Street's main barometer of investor fear, higher and to
levels near last Friday's 24.05 close.
The VIX rose 10 percent to 23.44, ending the trading session
above its 200-day moving average of 23.20.
"Today's sell-off came amid mixed earnings news and
uninspiring economic data early," said option strategist Frederic Ruffy at Web information site WhatsTrading.com.
The sell-off, led by banks and brokerages, began in earnest
after data from the National Association of Realtors showed June sales of
existing homes hit a 10-year low.
The VIX, which tracks projected stock market volatility
embedded in near-term Standard & Poor's 500 index
<.SPX> options, typically moves inversely to the S&P benchmark.
It often rises reflecting investors' angst and their
inclination to buy options to manage stock market risk.
"Housing and credit concerns knocked the market lower
today and confirmed that the short-term bounce in stocks could not be sustained,"
said Scott Fullman, director of derivative investment
strategy at broker-dealer WJB Capital Group.
As a result, some investors purchased put options to hedge
their long positions while others speculated that the market could suffer more
losses. Although fear has returned, there was no evidence of a panic to buy
options, Fullman added.
OPTION BEARS IN ETFS
The bearish mood among option traders was apparent in
several ETFs tracking the financial sector.
Option volume was two times the normal level in the ProShares UltraShort Financials
fund <SKF.A>, a contrarian ETF that performs inversely to the broader
financial market.
SKF shares jumped 11.81 percent to $130.70 as financial
stocks stumbled. The fund seeks to double the opposite of the daily performance
of the Dow Jones U.S. Financials Index.
In the options market, investors often turn to calls in the
fund if they are bearish on the financial sector and anticipate its shares to
go higher.
According to option analytics firm Trade Alert, about 39,000
calls changed hands vs. 11,000 puts, suggesting some traders may be using the
fund to protect their positions in the financial space, an analyst said.
Interactive Brokers Group analyst Rebecca Engmann Darst noticed some unusual
call activity in the SKF. It looked like a trader entered a 2,000-lot call
spread in the January contract between strikes $130 and $200 in a trade that
suggested the view that financial stocks would continue to decline through the
fall and that the July 15 high of $204.27 will remain into 2009, Darst said.
Put activity was busy in the Financial Select Sector SPDR
Fund <XLF.A>, which holds the financial-related components from the
S&P index, as more than 2 puts traded for every call, Trade Alert data
showed. XLF shares fell 6.72 percent to $20.95.
A put conveys the right to sell the fund's shares at a given
price and time while a call gives an investor the right to buy the fund at a
preset price within a set time period.
Roughly 440,000 puts traded in the XLF, a sign that some
players are bracing for further fallout in the sector, Ruffy
said.