I’ll be buying Call Options on Disney for the Volatility Portfolio on Monday–even if I won’t know the exact option until Monday morning’s trading

I’ll be buying Call Options on Disney for the Volatility Portfolio on Monday–even if I won’t know the exact option until Monday morning’s trading

Shares of Disney (DIS) dropped like a stone when the company reported after the close on May 13 that subscriptions to its Disney+ streaming service fell short of Wall Street projections for the March quarter. The shares closed at $178.37 on May 13 before the report and then opened the next morning at $169.57. They recovered some ground during the day and closed at $173.70 on Friday, May 14, down another 2.60% on the day. I’ve been arguing recently and repeatedly that I think Disney is one of the best stocks to own for a post-vaccine recovery economy. Sure, the subscription gains for Disney+ are likely to slow now that we’re not all locked in our homes and going stir-crazy. But the company’s most profitable unit–the big entertainment parks have been just about shut down during the pandemic and the California parks just started to reopen at the very end of April. I see the drop on the March quarter results as a substantial buying opportunity.

I’ll be buying Call Options on Disney for the Volatility Portfolio on Monday–even if I won’t know the exact option until Monday morning’s trading

Disney drop in after-hours session after streaming subscriber number misses

Disney (DIS) shares tumbled by 3.64% in after-hours trading after the company reported fiscal second quarter numbers that beat Wall Street estimates on earnings but missed projections on revenue and on subscribers to the company’s Disney+ streaming service. Adjusted earnings per share were 79 cents versus a projected 32 cents a share. (For the second quarter of 2020 the company reported earnings of $1.53 a share.) Revenue of $15.62 billion for the quarter was a bit shy of Wall Street projections of $15,85 billion. The big miss came in subscription growth for the company’s paid streaming service. Disney+ topped 100 million subscribers for the first time–just 16 months after the late 2019 launch of the service. (Competitor and streaming leading Netflix had 208 million global subscribers at the end of its most recently reported quarter.) The stock dropped on the news, however, since analysts had been looking for 110.3 million subscribers by the end of the quarter.

I’ll be buying Call Options on Disney for the Volatility Portfolio on Monday–even if I won’t know the exact option until Monday morning’s trading

Disney postpones release of Black Widow in movie theaters–what does that tell us about the post-vaccine economy?

A couple of weeks before Christmas, Disney (DIS) decided that the pandemic coast would be clear enough by May for it to send Black Widow, the next Marvel universe potential blockbuster–to movie theaters in May. Not so far, the company has now decided. With rates of infection rising again across the country, Disney has decided to push the theatrical release of Black Widow, starring Scarlett Johansson, to July.

Stocks driving you crazy yet? In massive turnaround, NASDAQ climbs 3.69% today after 2.41% tumble yesterday

Stocks driving you crazy yet? In massive turnaround, NASDAQ climbs 3.69% today after 2.41% tumble yesterday

Technology stocks, so pummeled yesterday, roared back today. The NASDAQ Composite gained 3.69% on the day. The NASDSQ 100 with its huge waiting to BIG TECH closed up 4.03%. After yesterday, a day when the recent rotation into value, cyclical, and vaccine recovery stocks resulted in a sell off in technology shares, today, March 9, those shares showed only muted if any gains, and tech stocks saw huge pickups.

The rotation gets extreme–Dow hits record intraday high while NASDAQ Composite falls into a correction

The rotation gets extreme–Dow hits record intraday high while NASDAQ Composite falls into a correction

Two indexes will tell you what you need to know about today’s stock market action. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, driven by cyclicals, vaccine recovery, and consumer stocks rose to an intraday record high. After a slight retreat at the end of the session, the Dow finished ahead 0.97% on the day. The NASDAQ Composite, on the other hand, weighed down by technology and growth momentum stocks dropped 2.41% on the day to fall into a full correction from the February 12 closing high.