The TSLA Call-Buying Scheme Is Not Working Again Today

The TSLA Call-Buying Scheme Is Not Working Again Today

Tyler Durden

Wed, 07/15/2020 – 10:30

Another day, another massive buying spree of deep-out-of-the-money-call “lottery tickets” in TSLA and another opening gap higher.

“Someone” is buying 100s of 1000s of share equivalents of $2500 and $3500 Calls that expire on Friday…

However, for the 3rd day in a row… it failed to ignite a sustainable momentum…

We detailed one reason why TSLA has been seeing this incessant opening panic-bid previously

One topic that is occasionally brought up by Tesla skeptics, but rarely examined in depth, has been a litany of out of the money call buying in the name that appears to be occurring, relatively aggressively, on a weekly basis.

While the buying could be attributed to normal market forces, a new article by Dan Stringer looks into the specifics of one such trade that took place last week, where it appeared that over $2.5 million was deployed in a very short term, very out of the money options buy.

The author then lays out that OCC rules dictate that the clearing house must have a certain percentage of this stock on hand to deal with the calls should they move into the money. He estimates a 20% ratio:

The broker-dealers need to have some margin level (per Rule 601 of the OCC rules); this can vary by broker-dealer and is subject to calculations with these rules. I have heard a typical ratio is roughly 20% on hand, so for the purpose of this exercise, I will use that.

From there, he determines that the options buy would trigger a purchase of 716,000 Tesla shares to cover the trade. He also notes the timing of the transaction, pointing out that “broker-dealer margin requirements are sent out by 10:00 am EST, or within the first ½ hour of trading” and arguing that this could cause a spike at the cash open.

This would create a potential spike in buying at the open, causing shares to spike. The following 12,800 options would then require a further 256,000 shares to be purchased using the same margin requirement methodology.

The author concludes by stating that the options buy could be a “relatively inexpensive” way to generate some forced buying in Tesla.

For a large-cap company like Tesla with the volume of shares that have been trading over the last several months, this option position would be a relatively in expensive cost to generate some forced buying, at a cost of just 5% of the open position.

Recall, the topic of strange call buying was also brought up in a podcast with well known Tesla skeptic, @TeslaCharts,  in May. Though the buys were discussed, neither the host nor the guest could speculate as to why these buys might be taking place. Thanks to Dan Stringer’s article, they may be on their way to an answer. 

We reiterated this strategy seeming to occur on Friday.

The question remains – who is buying these lottery tickets in size and who in the world gets to benefit most from the TSLA share price being at these incredibly elevated levels?

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/38XdTbr Tyler Durden

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