Banking, finance, and taxes
Options Bet: No Bank of America Nationalization (BAC)
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Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) has been the worst performer this year in the financial sector, or at least of all the large money center banks. The reasons are more on fears but the fears have been creating some actual reactions with dire consequences. And suddenly, Senator Dodd’s comments about not nationalizing Bank of America and the possibility of loosening or tweaking the mark-to-market rules have offered some stability. Shares are back up to flat today and we have seen more than 500 million shares trade hands.
Traders have been pounding Bank of America. The rumor mill has theN-WORD all over it… nationalization. Other talk is on the fate ofits books in a post-Merrill acquisition and mark to market rules. Butit goes on and on in rumors and fears. This stock closed at $14.08 on December 31, 2008. It no longer matters that Bank of America was at $38.15 on a dividend adjusted close at the end of 2007. But shares are now under $5.00.
Where this gets more interesting is in the activity seen in calloptions. Here we broke down teh call option activity by Strike price,contract volume, and the prior open interest. These were the levels seen at 1:57 PM EST:
FEB Volume Op.Int.
$4.00 45,904 9,322
$5.00 50,988 25,521
$6.00 106,391 49,509
$7.50 70,694 108,266
$9.00 17,273 71,857
$10.00 20,307 76,449
MAR Volume Op.Int.
$3.00 8,160 1,151
$4.00 7,431 1,217
$5.00 11,450 8,647
$6.00 12,097 16,210
$7.00 16,927 23,653
$8.00 16,239 61,077
Even in low-priced stocks and even with shares this active, it is very rare to see options volume this active. As options are representative of 100 shares per 1 contract, this isrepresentative of another 40 million shares worth of trading bets.That is also just on the two front months of February and March. This recovery and this huge options and stock volume may be a capitulation point. Everyone has been saying this has been trading as though it was going to be absorbed by Uncle Sam in a nationalization. It seems that traders are finally taking the bet against nationalization. At least for today.
Jon C. Ogg
February 5, 2009
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