Traders largely sat out today's trading session; volume was lower across the board. RUT and SPX both traded within a narrow range, $2 and $4, respectively. SPX closed at $1139, down twenty cents and RUT gained $0.05 to close at $667. The strong run of the markets over the past six sessions makes the market even more susceptible to any bad news. Even a minor pull back may spark a round of protective profit taking. However, there isn't much in the way of scheduled economic reports until Thursday's unemployment numbers, and then on Friday we have retail sales and the Michigan consumer sentiment report. So we may drift sideways for a couple of days.
I have rolled all of my call spreads up in both the March and April positions. I have also rolled the put spreads up from below to compensate for some of the losses rolling the call spreads upward. There is a trade-off in this maneuver: taking the profits on the put spreads helps offset some of the losses on the call spread side of the trade, but it also opens us up to a whipsaw if the market suddenly turns back. This is yet another example of the "no free lunch" principle.
Sitting On The Sidelines
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