One of my resolutions for 2009 is to figure out how to make better use of StockTwits as a tool for the part time intraday trader. I realize it’s pretty ludicrous to be using what amounts to a day trading tool for a strategy of intraday trades in this kind of market, but my intent is to learn. In fact, when your blogging ad revenue is measured in the millicents per year, the learning is the only thing of value you can glean from doing this in the open.
My going in premise on 2009 is that we’ll see a shallow rally of the S&P 500 to about 1000 on low volume, followed by a continued fall throughout the year to around 770 and possibly lower. I’m more inclined to follow through on ideas that I come across which fit that philosophy.
I’ll try to post once a week on the ideas that have caught in my filters, and the trades that resulted. As we stand before the first full trading week of 2009, I’ve inherited a number of StockTwits-inspired trades that I need to close out before I can fully embrace the one-idea-per-week goal for the year.
The current open positions (and the source of inspiration):
Short NDAQ
I entered this in stages. Short NDAQ common at $23 and $24.50 for a cost basis of $23.50. Long June $20 puts with a cost basis of $2.47.
I found this one via @alphatrends’ post. This was probably a bad idea—the theory really makes no sense from a Madoff perspective, but may pay off if my bearish sentiment is realized early in 2009. As with most of my options-related failures, the timing is key. In the fall, timing mattered little when there were DJIA swings of 1000 points in a day; now that swings have slowed down, timing matters more.
Selling SRS January premium
I’m trying to sell some premium here on my open $SRS position at a basis of $86. Selling a January $70 call tomorrow on any early pop.
$COST Puts
Found this one in two places. While I don’t believe that the payment form limitations cited by @BuyOnTheDip will prevent people from shopping there, I do buy the EarningsBreakout channel check that people are going to focus on staples rather than on premium electronics. Therefore, I’m going short with the puts. Long the July $40 puts with a cost basis of $2.10.
Short BBY
Went in to buy an iPhone this weekend. They were out of what we wanted, so we left. I can’t decide if that’s a good channel check or a bad one, but it signals to me that they are retrenching. Short the common with a basis of $26.45, and also sitting with June $20 puts at $3. Not looking so good with $BBY up to $30 today.
Long $AAPL April $100 Puts
Cost basis $16.86. I still hold that $AAPL is range bound between $80 and $100, so this is sort of neutral. I was simultaneously long and short last week, but closed out my open call positions. I have a tight leash on this into a rally. I may have to hold this until the post-show return to earth.
So far, only the $COST move is in the money. As I close out one of these others, I’m scanning for other opportunities. And trying to stay too small to fail.


