A Cheaper Way to Buy GLD

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For the past few weeks, I have warned that gold is overbought on the daily and weekly charts and might be nearing a short-term correction. This view has made me quite unpopular, but before you start getting all defensive about gold (no pun intended), understand that long term I believe gold is in a secular uptrend that could last much longer than many pundits and traders believe.

I do not hold myself out to be an economist, but it appears to me that there are several future catalysts that likely will give gold a boost. Unfortunately, the reasons gold could continue rallying are not economically pleasant, so instead of pounding the table about all of the various reasons investors should own gold, I am going to focus on a potential opportunity to buy gold at lower prices.

Based on a variety of technical indicators and analysis, paired with some fundamental opinions, a trader could make the case that gold is in need of a downward price correction. Gold has been purchased with strong volume for more than a year. When looking at a weekly chart of gold ETF SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD), it becomes apparent that the shiny metal is overbought and in need of a pullback, or at a minimum some healthy consolidation.

GLD Chart

As can be seen above, gold remains in a strong uptrend, and the price is well above the 50-period moving average. In fact, the 50-period moving average on the weekly GLD chart has not been tested since April 2009. The long-term trend remains bullish, but as stated above a pullback is possible.

If we take a look at the GLD daily chart, we notice the same long-term uptrend that we witnessed when looking at the weekly chart. In contrast, the daily chart does show potentially bearish formations beginning to work. While the bearish patterns may fail or turn out to be false, at this point a double-top formation is possible, as is a head-and-shoulders pattern. This is not to say that GLD cannot grind higher because the weekly chart looks quite strong, but the daily chart is at least posting a warning that lower prices may be coming in the not-so-distant future.

GLD Chart

While I am expecting a meaningful pullback at some point, I do not believe that gold is going to crash lower. In fact, I am viewing the possible correction in gold as an excellent potential long entry. Traders could look to purchase GLD around the 50-period moving average on the daily chart ($133.06), and then add to the position if the neckline is tested. I do not believe that price will get to the neckline, but if it does, I expect that level to hold and a new rally to take shape. Until gold gets below the 50-period moving average on the weekly chart, it remains in a technically constructive uptrend.

There are a variety of ways to purchase GLD if an equity trader wanted to leg into the trade at a variety of price targets. One strategy would be to simply accumulate partial positions at predetermined price targets. When considering entering a longer-term position, investors and traders should formulate a plan and then trade that plan. Through the use of a trading plan, the trader can remove emotion from the subsequent purchase(s) while managing risk.

For those who would like to use options to acquire GLD common stock, the easiest strategy would be to sell cash-secured naked puts. Secured naked puts do not require significant option trading experience and most option brokers will allow relatively inexperienced option traders to use this strategy. Each option contract represents 100 shares of GLD, so the trader sets aside a portion of his trading capital to purchase 100 shares of the underlying.

As a basic example, if a trader sold a cash-secured GLD Jan 133 Put, the trader would be required to have the appropriate cash in the account to purchase 100 shares of GLD at $133/share. So in order to have the put totally secured, the trader in this example would need $13,300 to fulfill the required capital obligation.

For a more speculative trader that was looking to collect option premium based solely on time decay (theta) and had no intention of owning common stock, margin encumbrance would be required. Most option brokers will demand that option traders be able to post 15%-20% of the total obligation (Reg T) and will allow more experienced option traders to use margin in order to cover the remaining portion. Traders using portfolio margin can use this strategy to add income to their portfolio without tying up a significant portion of their trading capital.

Based on the weekly chart above, the target support areas are around $133/share and $130/share, respectively. We will assume the trader wanted to purchase 100 shares at each price point. The trader in this example could sell one GLD Jan 133 Put and one GLD Jan 130 Put. Based on Friday’s prices, the trader would receive a credit of $235 for the 133 put and a credit of $139 for the 130 put. Total credit on this trade would be around $374 not including commissions. If GLD does not sell off and continues to rally, the trader has the potential to collect a large portion of option premium from the two cash-secured puts that he sold. In this case, the maximum gain would be the total credit received of $374 at expiration if the trader did not get assigned GLD common stock.

It is critically important to understand that there is significant risk in this trade as the theoretical loss would be over $26,000 assuming that GLD were to go to zero and the trader did not close out the position. Obviously gold is not likely to be worthless, and the odds of losing $26,000 are slim to none; however, it is theoretically possible. If the trader in the example gets assigned the stock he still gets to keep the option premium for which he sold the puts for, which was $374. Since he was purchasing 200 shares of GLD, his total cost would be reduced by $1.87 a share (374 / 200 = 1.87). The average price he would pay for 200 shares of stock would be $131.50/share (133+130 / 2 = 131.50), thus his actual price per share would be $129.63 (131.50 – 1.87 = 129.63).

The profit engine for the naked puts is time decay (theta). Volatility and price risk exist and would become reality if a massive overnight sell-off in gold took place. However, if the trade operated as is custom in traditional market conditions, the option trader in this case either will earn a portion or potentially all of the premium he received for selling the puts or he will be assigned 200 shares of GLD with a total basis of $129.63. If the trader wishes to own 200 shares of GLD and has the capital to purchase the common stock, this is an excellent way to develop a trading plan that takes advantage of support levels and remains profitable if GLD continues higher.

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