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The markets opened this morning and actually traded upward for a few minutes before the dance to the downside began and lasted the rest of the day. The Nonfarm Payroll Report actually set a record with 290k jobs added in April, the highest since March of 2006. About 66k of those were temporary census workers. But the bad news was the unemployment rate as it ticked up to 9.9%. Apparently, a large number of people re-entered the market to search for jobs, pushing this number higher even as more jobs were being added to payrolls. Trading volumes remained at the record levels set yesterday; volume on the NYSE exceeded two billion shares both yesterday and today. Trading in the S&P 500 stocks exceed eight billion shares yesterday and was just under eight billion shares today (the 50 day moving average (dma) is about 4.5B). RUT closed at $653, a loss of $19 on the day while the SPX closed at $1111 for a loss of $17. RUT touched its January high of $650 during the day but rebounded a bit. SPX broke through its January high of $1150 yesterday and touched its 200 dma at $1096 before bouncing back upward. Gold set a new 2010 high at $1215.

As you might expect, my iron condors have been trampled in this stampede. The May put spreads were stopped out yesterday; today I opened new put spreads at 590/600 and rolled the calls down to 710/720. This positions both spreads outside of one standard deviation OTM and leaves us with a possibility of a gain of about $1000, based on the shaky assumption that the carnage is over. The greeks are excellent with delta = -$21 and theta = +$306. My June 640/650 put spreads were also stopped out yesterday. I closed the put hedges and established new put spreads at 580/590 today. This leaves my June RUT condor greeks at delta = +$30 and theta = +$67.

The question now is whether we have neared the bottom of this correction. The fact that the trading action both yesterday and today hit intraday lows and then bounced back upward is a positive sign, but we'll see.