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How Will the S&P 500 Close in the Future?

Posted By PK    Last updated July 30th, 2012 9 Comments

You all know what time it is!  It’s time to parse the option trader tea leaves and guess where the options market thinks we are headed in the near to somewhat not near future.  As always, we are taking options data from Yahoo, and using contracts which trade more than .5% of the daily volume to make our targets.  We’re also using the ticker SPY (a S&P 500 ETF) as our proxy for the S&P – all numbers you see are multiplied by 10 to get the conversion to actual closing prices.

What Does the Data Mean?

Remember, options are 3 times more difficult to trade than stocks.  Stocks require you to get one thing right – direction.  Even if you are incorrect, you generally have an equity which is still worth something.  Options, on the other hand, require you to pick direction, magnitude and price.  Oh, and they can expire worthless.  That’s why for the beginning to intermediate trader, it’s best to use options as an indicator – not a trading device.  Without further ado, let’s look at the charts!  (Note: Remember, a month means when options stop trading, the third Friday of the month.  Click here to see the calendar.)
First up, the puts… which seem to be implying flat to slightly down.  As we’ve noted in past editions, puts tend to be more pessimistic than calls, and July is no different.

And here are the calls… which predict flatness until around election time, then perhaps some green shoots?

Full prediction table is here:

2012-08 2012-09 2012-10 2012-11 2012-12 2013-01 2013-03 2013-06
Put High 1390.00 1390.00 1387.36 1382.25 1381.50 1395.00 1432.23 1400.56
Put Medium 1367.08 1350.00 1338.27 1338.68 1331.93 1295.00 1330.00 1300.93
Put Low 1323.63 1261.87 1249.50 1225.00 1140.00 1021.46 1145.00 1148.82
Call High 1413.50 1437.56 1431.22 1449.49 1430.00 1425.00 1510.00 1500.00
Call Medium 1377.29 1380.00 1382.22 1381.56 1370.00 1379.79 1440.00 1400.00
Call Low 1348.89 1350.00 1347.84 1340.73 1350.99 1311.72 1330.00 1301.59

Past predictions are here:

  • January 2012
  • March 2012
  • April 2012
  • May 2012
  • June 2012

Dubious Results?

As an indicator, options are quite interesting – but volatility has been killing the record lately.  We’ll tally everything up at the end of the year, but last month the calls got it right (almost on the nose – the 50% call was 1360 versus a close of 1362) and the puts missed it on the low side, with the 75% top coming at 1360.  Perhaps another sign the market is beatable?  Anyone want to discuss that?

Thoughts on the options market predictions?  How do you think the elections will affect it?  Any contrarian signs you can pull from this data?  Want me to run the numbers with different criteria?  Let me know!


If you enjoyed this post, let others know!


Filed Under: Investing Tagged With: market, options, predictions, s&p closing price

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  • JT

    Nice to see the graph take the shape of my January comment: flat through election, then decent run up. I still think that will be true.

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      I assume you’re optimistic and watching the calls?

      I do find this series interesting, even if I’m not yet sold on the results coming from the traders. Good. I’ll keep trading stocks…

  • AverageJoe

    As usual, I agree w/ JT. I think with the election too close to call, people buying and selling calls or puts are suggesting that investors have a “wait and see” attitude. Once there’s certainty, the market will run again.

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      If I had to call it today, I’d go with President Obama (and not just because our sidebar says so, haha), with a little bit better chance than a coinflip. I think horse races are dumb this far out – in a month we’ll start having enough people paying attention (especially after the Romney VP announcement) that polling will be more worthwhile. At this point it’s all just guessing…

  • http://www.myjourneytomillions.com Evan@MyJourneytoMillions

    PK,

    I am confused by the graphs – is the factor moving the puts/calls volume or price?

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      Neither – I tried to use last trade price at one point, but discovered bid/ask is more reliable so I’m using that. As for volume, I throw out any data point below .5% of daily volume and .2% of open interest.

      This version is the best I’ve had it working, but I want to factor in volume as an indicator too – I’m just not sure how to separate people hedging (or selling calls, etc) versus people actually making bets. Any ideas?

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