2 Option Trades To Consider For Monday
31.12.69
For several months, I have published Friday options articles that converge on activity highlighted by several Seeking Alpha contributors. While readers have, by and thickset, responded well to this series, I think it's time to clear a slight change.
Going forward, I will supreme stocks that warrant your attention, for one reason or another, heading into Monday's trading term. I will still use the work of Frederic Ruffy, optionMONSTER and others from duration to time to inspire some selections and provide true option trades you might want to consider.
Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) : Everything appears to be affluent according to the plan over at Tesla. Not only is the first run of the Model S sold out, but the callers will be able to deliver it and the crossover Model X on schedule. Tesla continues to develop more revenue by supplying other automakers with electric instrument (EV) components. The strategy helps them negotiation with the lag time between Roadster and Model S sales. This time the concern inked a deal with Mercedes.
Source: Seeking Alpha
G. Chambers Williams III: Outsourcing auto work to US
31.12.69
After years of seeing U.S. manufacturing jobs shifted to China and other countries where products could be made less expensively, the tide is starting to reshape, at least for the auto industry.
America has become a good quarters to build cars for the rest of the world, some automakers have determined. Labor costs are within reason; there is a great workforce available; and the currency switch rates are quite favorable.
Toyota, which already has been exporting some of the vehicles that it assembles in the Synergetic States — including the San Antonio-built Tundra and Tacoma pickups — this week said it will Rather commence sending some of its Indiana-built Sienna minivans to South Korea.
Nissan, which has the largest U.S. auto situate of any automaker in Tennessee, is on the verge of exporting vehicles from this wilderness, as well. In Nissan's case, though, it might build some cars in the U.S. for export only — models that are not even sold in North America.
Toyota already exports about 100,000 vehicles a year from its U.S. plants to 19 overseas countries, but they are vehicles that the company also sells in North America. Exports began in 1988.
Source: San Antonio Express