The following post was written and/or published as a collaboration between Benzinga’s in-house sponsored content team and a financial partner of Benzinga.
Dollar General DG is due to report earnings for the September quarter on Thursday before the opening bell. The stock is up 40% this year and is trading near its all-time high.
Here are the consensus Wall Street estimates for Thursday:
- Earnings Per Share: $1.97
- Revenue: $8.12 billion
How DG Historically Moves Before, During, And After Earnings
More often than not, Dollar General closes higher on the day before an earnings report. The average return for DG on such days over the last 12 quarters is 0.3%, though the stock moves an average of 1.5% in either direction.
Source: Market Chameleon
On the day of earnings, DG trades down an average of 0.9% (the avg return field below) and is more than likely to trade down than up.
Source: Market Chameleon
However, DG tends to trade higher in the days and weeks after a report. The stock’s best performance is in the first three days after earnings, during which it returns an average of 2.7%.
Source: Market Chameleon
So, what kind of options trade should you make in DG into Thursday’s report?
If You Are Bullish
For bullish DG traders, you may want to consider the Long Call strategy.
Source: Market Chameleon
This strategy involves holding the position until its Dec. 4 expiration. The long call will profit if the stock rises above whatever the cost of the option was plus the strike price. As a call buyer, you risk losing the cost of the option purchase.
In the case of the trade outlined above, the payout diagram is as follows:
Source: Market Chameleon
Note that the call will profit at expiration if the stock price closes above $229.70, which is 4.4% away from the spot price.
The maximum loss that can be incurred will happen if DG is below $227.50 at expiration. At that point, the strategy will lose $220 per contract.
According to Market Chameleon, buying a call option at the 227.5 strike that expires on Dec. 4 would result in a 38% theoretical edge over typical market conditions.
If You Are Neutral
For traders who want to profit if DG makes a big move in either direction, a Debit Iron Condor is appropriate.
Source: Market Chameleon
This trade is a way to take advantage of implied volatility by buying a put, selling a put below it, buying a call, and selling a call above it. Below is a payout diagram of the call option described above at expiration.
Source: Market Chameleon
In this case, the trade will profit if DG closes at or below $200 or at or above $240 at expiration. The maximum gain is $890, while the maximum loss is capped at $360, and will only happen if the stock closes between $212.50-$227.50 at expiration.
According to Market Chameleon, putting on a debit iron condor for Dec. 4 expiration at the specific strike prices outlined above would result in a 37% theoretical edge over typical market conditions.
The preceding post was written and/or published as a collaboration between Benzinga’s in-house sponsored content team and a financial partner of Benzinga. Although the piece is not and should not be construed as editorial content, the sponsored content team works to ensure that any and all information contained within is true and accurate to the best of their knowledge and research. This content is for informational purposes only and not intended to be investing advice.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.