Alarm Bells: Unusual Options Activity in the Airlines
Most conspiracy theories aren't worth the vapors they're concocted from; we don't need something elaborate to explain what happens simply in the course of human events.
But options
action in two airline stocks ahead of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks suggests that the very perpetrators of these atrocities may have benefited from the disasters. Unusual action happened in the options of United Airlines' parent UAL (UAL Quote) and American Airlines' parent AMR (AMR Quote), and here's how you can tell.
A New Level of Evil
The most common clues of something amiss in options trading are unusual volume or a jump in volatility or either of these developments occurring in conjunction with confirming price movement in the underlying stock. Options volume alone doesn't tell the whole story, because many options traders and market makers engage in nondirectional "precision" strategies designed to take advantage of unusual volatility differentials between months and strikes
, or to arbitrage positions against each other.
Many of these strategies, such as the "box" trades used by floor traders to borrow and lend money, involve large volumes of both put
and call
options. Other common trading strategies, such as "verticals," involve the simultaneous purchase and sale of call or put options at different strikes. (Visit the Chicago Board Options Exchange's Web site to learn more about the mechanics of these trades.)
Only those obviously directional trades -- large purchases of just puts or just calls without any offsetting spread positions -- really jump out. Not only do these trades indicate something's up, but they often force market makers into buying or selling stock as a hedge. A market maker who sells puts to terrorists is incurring an obligation to buy the stock at that strike price, and is quite likely to sell the stock as a hedge. Let's look at put-option trading in UAL and AMR.
A Suffering Sector
First, it's important to remember that airlines were in trouble before Sept. 11. The 10-member American Stock Exchange Airline Index, or XAL, had already lost 30% of its value since the start of the year. Critical horizontal support had broken, tested from below, and a classic waterfall decline had started to form on the chart. These stocks were not in any shape to withstand the upcoming onslaught.| Amex Airline Index in a Slide Prior to Sept.11 |
| Source: Bloomberg |
| Airline Options: Volumes and Volatilities The highlighted options exhibited exceptional volume, and they weren't part of any spreading strategies | ||||
| AMR Oct. $30 Strike | ||||
| Call Volume | Call Volatility | Put Volume | Put Volatility | |
| 9/6/01 | 10 | 35.5% | 23 | 35.0% |
| 9/7/01 | 45 | 38.4 | 125 | 42.7 |
| 9/10/01 | 48 | 48.5 | 1535 | 52.8 |
| UAL Oct. $30 Strike | ||||
| 9/6/01 | NA | 36.2% | 2000 | 38.3% |
| 9/7/01 | 3 | 35.1 | 10 | 41.0 |
| 9/10/01 | 10 | 37.1 | 100 | 42.0 |
| Source: Bloomberg | ||||
-
Sell the overpriced natural put at 52.8%.
Sell AMR stock and buy the October $30 call, a combination called a synthetic put, at 48.5%.
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