Michael: Hello everyone. This is Michael Gross at OptionSellers.com here with your podcast for October 27, 2017. Well, we marked the thirtieth anniversary of the stock market crash of 1987 this month. With stocks hitting new highs every day, a lot of investors are asking that same question – can it happen again. Some people say no, some people say yes but, an interesting prospect comes into play here with the news on tax reform. Will tax reform get passed? How will that affect the stock market? [I’m] here with James Cordier our head trader. James, welcome to the show.
James: Thank you every much, Michael. Good afternoon to you.
Michael: James, what’s your take on this. Everybody’s building up to tax reform – how it could affect stocks, if it does or doesn’t go through. Do you have a viewpoint on this right now?
James: Michael, the discussion about tax reform is certainly extremely business-friendly. Practically all facets of the U.S. economy would likely benefit from this and of course bringing overseas dollars back to the United States, allowing companies to generate more income through investment as well as the one-percenters that sometimes sit on their hands when taxation is too high, a great number of these things could be alleviated if tax reform goes through. Certainly, I think, that’s what a lot of the bullishness is with the stock market right now. It’ll be very interesting to see the next thirty days how that plays out and then what the stock performance is after that.
Michael: I saw this month that Goldman-Sachs projected there’s a sixty-five percent chance tax reform gets passed in 2018 but, there’s also some dire warnings what could happen to stocks if it doesn’t get passed. Do you think there’s a built in assumption right now in equities that this does go through and if it doesn’t, there’s going to be some disappointed bulls out there?
James: I think so. Certainly, the stock market is forward thinking and they are looking at tax reform in the very near future, probably the first half of 2018 like you mentioned. There is no question that the stock market is at precarious levels. If it continues to get positive forward thinking, no reason why it can’t go up but, sooner or later, it’s going to get a dose of medicine that it may not tolerate and tax reform not passing would certainly be one of those possible culprits.
Michael: Alright. Certainly something to watch over the next several months. Let’s hope we can get it done. Topic for this month’s podcast is two markets for year-end positioning and, we’re going to talk about a couple markets here that probably don’t care much about what happens in stocks. They’re completely uncorrelated. As we know from anybody that’s listened to us or read our materials we trade commodities primarily because that non-correlated aspect to stocks and each other. Primarily answering to their own supply-demand fundamentals. Out first market this month we’re going to talk about is the natural gas market. James, this is a market you’ve talked about here previously – the last month or two. But now we’re coming into the time of year where a lot of small speculators, people that aren’t real familiar with commodities often think of kind of that pop analysis, ‘boy, I should buy natural gas heading into winter because it’ll probably go up.’ A good article you wrote this month about that says maybe you want to do just the opposite. Do you want to talk about that a little bit?
James: Michael, it’s interesting natural gas just has incredible historic volatility. With hurricanes that came into the Gulf of Mexico several years ago and then some extreme winters that we’ve had a few years ago as well, and that has brought investors looking at things like natural gas going into the winter season. The last few fourth quarters in the United States have been relatively mild. That is one of the reasons why natural gas is down this year going into winter heating season. It appears to us that natural gas supplies however, will be quite ample. We do often with the first cold blast in either November or December you do have speculators, both large and small, run into that market. The bottom line is this: Natural gas is now produced in so many not only nations around the world, but also states here in America. The idea that we could run out of a certain amount of the supply, one mishap or another as far as production, or if there’s a big spike in demand, natural gas can go to the moon, and right now that criteria has really been taken out of this market. We have a great deal of new drilling, especially in Texas. We have natural gas basically being produced as a by-product. So, we think natural gas in the low 3’s is probably fair valued for the market right now. We are going to be very keen to selling calls above the market on again i