Quote from Eliot Hosewater:
I downloaded SPX data from Yahoo to check for major gaps from the previous close to the next open. The 50 biggest ones, both up and down, occurred in the 1950s and there were only a few more than 2%. In those days a 5% move could be about a point or two.
I'm sure anything is possible, but what are the real chances of a major percentage gap these days?
Edit: Even after the earthquake in Japan two weeks ago the S&P only opened 3 points lower on Monday than it closed the Friday of the quake (IIRC the quake happened just about closing time).
Quote from blackjack007:
i remember quite a few of them from sep-oct 2008.
i also remember MLK day 2008 when ES went limit-down and the fed had to do the emergency rate cut. asian markets had crashed and US markets were about to crash.
the odds of a large gap-down happening on any given day are very low. but the odds it will happen at some point in your trading career is 100%.
Quote from Eliot Hosewater:
Any idea how SPX (or SPY) options work in that case? I recall having a position about 5 years ago and realizing the market was going to open lower. Sorry, it's all a bit fuzzy and I don't recall the underlying or the position, but I put an order in to close the night before and it got filled before the stock market opened and at a price before it tanked.
You're only going to get a fill if the market trades at the pprice you seek. It can be dumb money or just getting a decent price before the order imbalance occur and sends things down fast.
Edit: I just checked 9/17/2001 and the low of the day was "only" 5% lower than the alleged open, which yahoo reports as the same as the 9/10 close. I don't recall where it really started trading that day.
Don't assume that because the opening price is only X % below the previous close that you will get to trade there. Most people tend to watch the drop as it gets worse. Even if you are disciplined and you have determined that you will close at the open, in a fast market, your fill may end up even lower. Try watching a fast open (up or down) on a big day and find out how untradeable it can be (limit, not market order).
People puking up their positions is a beautiful thing. Imbalances occur quickly and opportunities are greater.Quote from FrankSlaughtery:
+1. Given that there will be a large gap down how will you protect yourself? Stops would be absolutely useless. Diversification for the most part is useless as correlations would go to 1 due to everyone puking up positions (except for treasuries). You could trade ES options on globex and not have to wait for the open but as another poster said wide spreads might be an issue. In this case you could exercise them and sell the futures if mm's walk away. Don't fear the black swan. PTJ tripled his money after the '87 crash.
Quote from blackjack007:
the april 2000 rate cut was intra-day but the MLK 2008 rate cut was after hours. in fact it was announcted on a federal holiday! (a day you'd expect them to not do something like this because you assumed they weren't working.)
Quote from Eliot Hosewater:
Doesn't the Fed usually announce while the market is open?
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yes I did grab a couple of ES on the way up but it wasn't enough to save me.Quote from RichardRimes:
OMG Eliot..you have been around long enough to remember the FED announcement a few years back 1 hr before market open on EXP FRI that sent the ES up 50 pts and SET was 50 pts higher than the THURs close. In my book that was major enough for a lot of people to blow up! I took a huge loss cause I had prudently closed my put spreads which would have been safe...yes I did grab a couple of ES on the way up but it wasn't enough to save me.
I could honestly NOT believe that they would do a surprise announcement not just before market open but on ExPat options!!!!
