FXI & bottoming Pattern.Looks like An Ascending Triangle as a bottom ? yes or no? $yinn Longby tsippi100449
Bearish on FXI, breaks a almost 3-year supportBearish on FXI, breaks a almost 3-year supportShortby XiongCC1
FXI WAVE C of WAVE B IS NOW FORMING WE WILL SEE A BULL WAVE NOWWE ARE NOW ENDING C OF A MAJOR WAVE B LOW LOOK FOR A VERY STRONG AND VERY FAST UP MOVE FOR THE NEXT 30 TO 60 DAYS Longby wavetimer4
the shibor-shakedown part ? currency sterilization Achilles heeli suggest hopping in your time machine and re-examining 1997 thailand or 1989 japan. both sterilization schemes ultimately failed especially when their real-estate market buckled. in order to support the sterilization measures the chinese must borrow dollars in order to devalue their currency. there's a shortage of dollars meaning the likelihood of buckling is a realistic risk. when the chinese devalue they import inflation and export deflation. meaning this hong kong incident is a likely reaction to mainland china inflation (not showing in fudged numbers). with a global liquidity crisis ongoing. expect a "plaza accord" type meeting to reign in the dollar and give the US long term the upper hand.by The_dumpster_diver2
China FXIAfter hitting the low 50's twice and being met with high volume selling, the FXI looks to be heading down to the bottom of a mutli-year range at ~29. Where the FXI is headed after that is unknown. We could see a spring form at the bottom of the range then a move up, or a continuation of the down move to the lows of 2008. I think that a continuation of the move to ~20 is the most likely scenario.Shortby martied16Updated 1
CHINA AND DEFLATION CYCLES We have now formed a very long term head and shoulder top and the next wave of deflation in world assets CASH AND US BONDS LAST STAND FOR WEALTH TO STORE by wavetimer1
SHORT PUT DEFENSEYou put on an FXI 43 short put in the June cycle, betting on a trade deal coming through, and ... oops ... it didn't, and your short put is now deep in the money. What do you do now? Fortunately, there are several paths you can undertake to defend the position and/or reduce the cost basis in any shares you might be assigned either randomly or at expiration. (a) Roll Out for Duration. Rolling out "as is" (i.e., from the June 43 to the July 43) will bring in additional credit (.21), reduce the net delta of the position (from to 67.72 to 64.54), as well as decrease your cost basis in any stock you might be assigned. Because there is still extrinsic left in the 43 (about .72), it's usually best to wait until the majority of the extrinsic has decayed out before rolling.* Some broker platforms display this conveniently; others, you'll have to manually calculate it. Here, the strike price (43) minus the value of the option (2.45) = 40.55. The stock is currently trading at 41.27, so the extrinsic left in the option is 41.27 - 40.55 or .72. (b) Roll Out for Duration and Strike Improvement. The current value of the 43 short put is 2.45. In order to strike improve (e.g., to 42), you're going to have to roll to a 42 strike in an expiry in which the price of the 42 short put exceeds 2.45; the first expiry in which this occurs is quite far out in time -- November, where the 42 strike is currently priced at 2.87.** Rolling from the June 43 to the November 42 brings in an additional credit of .42, improves your break even/cost basis, and reduces your net delta from 67.72 to 51.77. The downside is that this extends duration dramatically from 37 days until expiration to 185 days. (c) Wait, Take Assignment if Price Finishes Below 43, and Proceed to Sell Calls Against at Or Above Your Cost Basis. Sometimes, this is, in fact, the play you want to do from the get-go. For whatever reason, you want in on the stock (e.g., dividends), and you're totally comfortable with taking on shares at that point. In fact, time could very well be of the essence in taking on shares if you want to be in the stock as of the next date of record for purposes of collecting the dividend. In those cases where that was not the play or you'd prefer reducing cost basis further before taking on shares, you're going want to take one of the other paths available to you, if only because -- particularly on margin -- being in shares isn't buying power efficient over being in an options position. (d) Add by Selling More Puts or Strangles. I generally do not opt for the former unless I'm keen on generating a longer term position in the underlying since it adds long delta to an already long delta position, which can amplify P and L draw down if there is continuation. On occasion, however, I will short strangle a deep in the money short put, with the goal being to more quickly reduce cost basis in it so that I can conceivably exit the trade more quickly. For example, selling the June 39/43 would reduce cost basis in the 43 short put position by an additional .98 and reduce net delta slightly. Naturally, if there is downside continuation, this trade could potentially leave you in the same boat as you were with just the 43 short put alone, only now with a two-lot at the 39 and 43 strikes. (e) Sell Calls Against in the Current Cycle. Generally, this is the choice I make where I'm not keen on taking on shares at that point in time, where I want to reduce cost basis further before taking on shares, and where I want to maximize the rate of theta/extrinsic in the options, which is speediest and/or accelerates as the option approaches expiry. There also is an advantage to staying in the puts over taking on stock, since shorts puts generally have extrinsic in them to decay out; stock does not, so you get a little extra cost basis reduction on the put side even when they are monied. When you do this is somewhat subjective, but I generally opt for selling 20-30 delta calls against when the delta in the short put is in the 70-80 delta range. For example, I would sell the 27 delta 43 call against the 43 put in the June cycle for a .43 credit, resulting in a June 43 short straddle. This has the effect of reducing my cost basis in any shares I might be assigned on the 43 short put by another .43, improves my break even by a like amount, and reduces net delta in the position from 67.72 to 40.27. The downside to doing this is it injects call side risk into a setup that did not previously have any, and you'll now have to manage the short straddle going forward as opposed to managing the simplicity of the short put. Naturally, if there is little time left until expiry of the short puts (<21 days), you'll probably want to roll them out "as is" for a credit first and then proceed to sell the 20-30 calls against in the same expiry. In all cases, you will want to keep track of credits collected and your cost basis in the position. This is the only way you'll know what your scratch point is and/or when you can profitably bail on the trade. * -- I generally roll at 21 days until expiry and don't wait for all of the extrinsic to bleed out with an in-the-money short. Generally speaking, assignment risk increases as extrinsic value an in-the-money option converges on zero, which is generally on the back side of the cycle. ** -- You could, in fact, roll from the June 43 to the November 41.5 for a small credit.by NaughtyPines775
China Large-Cap looking bearishFollowing a double-top, symbol="AMEX:FXI"]AMEX:FXI has broken below an ascending trendline and horizontal support. The down-gapping candle is bullish, but there is a lot of weakness going into this chart. One could imagine the price moving up to test previous support and making a move downward.Shortby JGSmith1233
Chinese Double Top ReversalI think we see some bearish action here to retest support around $43.25 in the next few daysShortby UnknownUnicorn735910
China's Large Cap: Ready to test the 10 year Highs?With the U.S. - China trade deal developments ongoing and reportedly staying on positive grounds, the stock markets are globally on the rise in 2019. This is a good time to examine how the heavy Chinese companies are performing. FXI is the index that tracks China's stocks with the largest capitalization. On the monthly (1M) chart we see that since the 2009 crash, it has been recovering on Higher Highs and Higher Lows, effectively constructing a Channel Up on 1M (RSI = 56.535, MACD = 0.600, Highs/Lows = 0.3822). These indicators show that it recently hit a low point and is on the early stages of a new bullish leg. On the chart this is evident by the January 2019 bounce on the inner lower Higher Low trend line (indicated in dash). What is also evident are the 1M Support Zone (28.20 - 28.70) and 1M Resistance Zone (52.90 - 54.00). The 1M Resistance Zone is our immediate target although the 10 year Channel Up suggests that it may break it and peak as high as 61.00. In our opinion it is definitely a time to start looking at China's Large Cap more favorably. We have already warned of this upcoming bullish leg on the Shanghai Composite Index on December 2018: ** If you like our free content follow our profile (www.tradingview.com) to get more daily ideas. ** Comments and likes are greatly appreciated.Longby InvestingScope7
FXI large weekly base forming $38/$42...options details belowChina (FXI) afternoon buying in August $44 calls for 8,990 contracts $2.15 to $2.18 right into the close. FXI large weekly base forming $38/$42 that measures up to a $46 target, also would retest the key 2018 breakdown and be a 50% retracement.Longby OPTIONSHAWK0
$FXI going to fill gap around 46 or heading lower?Looks like a double bottom, but seems like the least resistance is to go down. Let's wait until the trade deal by Dicken802397582
FXI CHINESE MARKETS BOTTOM IN OCTOBER 2021 - TALKS DON'T MATTERMomentum Model suggests October 2021 will be bottom for Chinese markets brschultz / markettimer777Educationby brschultzSP5001