Emerging-Market Bears Say Options Trades Signal End of Rally By Jeff Kearns
Dec. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Trading of bearish emerging-market options rose to a 10-week high as investors increased wagers that a U.S. exchange-traded fund tracking stocks in developing nations will retreat after doubling since March.
More than 718,000 puts giving the right to sell the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index changed hands last week, or
54 percent higher than the average this year. The ETF, which tracks shares in 22 countries, lost 1.2 percent to $41.35 last week as the Dollar Index rose a second week, oil posted the
longest losing streak in six years and investors speculated that the heightened risk of default in Spain, Greece and Dubai may signal that credit losses will spread throughout the global economy.
“What’s notable is the size and consistency of the trading over the past week,†said Mike Thurow, a senior options strategist at Susquehanna Financial Group LLP in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. “It’s been a
steady stream of put buying and call selling, which means investors are betting on a decline over the next few weeks, as they’ve been primarily focused on January options.â€
Investors are boosting wagers that the EEM
will retreat 5.7 percent from last week’s close before next month’s options expire Jan. 15. The number of existing January $39 puts almost tripled last week to 80,461 contracts for the biggest increase in open interest among all options on the ETF, according to data compiled by Trade Alert LLC, a New York-based provider of options market analytics.
‘Has Me Nervous’
“If there’s one thing that has me nervous about being in emerging markets now, it’s a
sharp appreciation in the dollar,†said Greg Lesko, the head of emerging-market equity at Deltec Asset Management in New York, which oversees $750 million. “Commodities priced in dollars will generally go down and there’s a
significant amount of the emerging world that’s sensitive to commodities, like Brazil and Russia.†Dubai’s debt woes may worsen to become a “major sovereign default†that
roils developing nations and cuts off capital flows to emerging markets, Bank of America Corp. said Nov. 27. The
Dubai Financial Market General Index has fallen 23 percent since Nov. 11. “Investors are anticipating that the bull market has plateaued,†said Matthew Kolbe, an ETF options trader at Group One Trading LP in Chicago. “They’re waiting to see if
growing sovereign debt concerns will spark a sell-off in emerging markets.â€
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