This Is How the Pros Play the Facebook Lows

Facebook Inc. (Nasdaq: FB) is a must-own tech darling stock. In five years, it went from $20 to $195, for an 875% gain.

But it's been giving investors a royal headache lately, dropping from $195 to $150 in two months - a scary, quick 23% correction.

The social media hero, and sometimes villain, is now back up to just below $160.

If you own it, you're probably wondering what to do with it. If you don't own it and you want to buy it, you're probably wondering what's a good price to get into it. Or, if you're a hater and want to see it keep falling, maybe you're wondering how low it can go and how you can make money on it dropping.

Here's how I see the company and the stock right now, and how to play it every which way.

FB's Potential Is Staggering, but So Is Its Problem

Me, I want to buy into FB on this dip. That's why I'm happy to see it scrape lower, so I can buy it cheaper.

The company is the social media $40 billion-pound (in revenue) and $16 billion-pound (in net profit) gorilla in almost everyone's living room. It owns the social media space.

It also owns Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus VR, and drone-maker Ascenta.

It has 2.2 billion users worldwide.

Think about that: 2.2 billion people are on and using Facebook one way or another.

That's a huge target for advertisers. That's a lot of customers to target for all kinds of sales, besides other sellers' products, products, and services Facebook has yet to introduce.

Stunning Video Footage: Watch this guy become $4,238 richer in under a minute – then follow his simple instructions to learn how you could pocket a potential $2,918 in just one move. Click here

Facebook's potential is staggering.

But so are its problems right now.

Call it growing pains. Call it the bane of technology, getting way out ahead of regulations that don't exist for what new technologies bring with them. Call it what you want, just don't expect these problems to go away - ever.

Facebook's biggest problem right now, not that there aren't others and won't be lots more, is how a firm that got access to Facebook users and their friends may have targeted them with political messages, news, and ads to try to influence their voting in the past U.S. presidential election. The same data company, Cambridge Analytica, used Facebook users' data in the UK to try to influence the Brexit vote and in Africa in other elections.

Mark Zuckerberg is testifying before Congress this week to answer questions about Facebook data protections, hacks, how it can be used to influence people, and probably a host of other hard-to-swallow questions.

The outcome of his testimony could shake Facebook to the core if he screws up. Even if he doesn't, he could become the scapegoat for political infighting, which could result in all kinds of new regulations on how social media companies use all the data they collect.

If all goes well, then the stock's probably heading higher again. But I can't imagine Zuckerberg or Facebook is going to come out smelling like a rose.

So, here's how to play the stock over the next few months.
[mmpazkzone name="in-story" network="9794" site="307044" id="137008" type="4"]

The Perfect Way to Play

If you own FB and you're worried it could go lower based on Zuck's testimony, or if earnings disappoint on April 25, then you want to sell the stock and take your profits. Or, you can buy some put options for further downside protection.

A good technical analysis of FB shows it could easily drop to $120 if there's a lot of selling on bad news.

If the stock drops down to $120, that would be a big move.

To protect yourself if you own the stock and don't want to sell it, the simple way to make money on a downside move in the stock is to buy put options.

Since technically the stock could go to $120 on bad news, I like buying the $120 puts that expire on June 15, 2018, for about $0.90. They're relatively cheap right now, because not many investors think FB could drop another 25% from $160. But it's possible. And given the market volatility lately mixed with FB's own volatility, and if investors get nervous and FB breaks below $150 by the end of April or May, those puts should jump in value - possibly doubling or tripling if a big down move comes quickly.

Making put plays like this is what we do in my Zenith Trading Circle research service, and we've had a LOT of really big winners making these kinds of moves.

Me, personally, I like FB for the long term. I believe it will make it out of this mess, with new regulations trailing it for sure, but make it out nonetheless.

I believe the company has insane potential (when it gets its house in order and changes some business practices), and I have no doubt it could double in a few years.

But first, on a breakout above $160, especially if earnings numbers are as strong as they're expected to be, the stock could pop a lot higher from here.

Zuck Muck and What to Do Next

There has, however, been some shorting of FB lately, especially going into the Zuck vs. Congress showdown this week. If nothing bad happens, the stock weathers the Zuck muck, and earnings are good, the stock will pop. And short-covering could make the upside move dramatic.

From here, around $160, if you're betting the stock is going to rebound, the move to make is to buy call options.

Because the high on FB is $195 and it could get there again if all ends well, I like the $190 calls that expire on Sept. 21, 2018 (FB180921C00190000). You can pick them up for around $3.00 if you're patient.

I like buying the further out September calls, because that gives the stock a chance to bump up and down, even take a hit, because bad news always travels faster than good news - and there's still a chance to recover after the summer doldrums.

Of course, in my Zenith Trading Circle research service, we can like FB on the downslide, and later as it climbs back to its former glory. In this situation, I like buying both the puts and the calls.

That way I can root for Facebook on the way down and later on the way up.

Speaking of stocks on the downslide...

You Need a Thick Skin to See This (but It Could Help You Make a Ton of Money)

Even though the market is a complete mess right now, there is one thing you can do about it.

And right now you have a choice – you can either get offended… or learn how to get rich.

You see, I've shown my readers an unbelievable 7,100% total winning gains in the past year, just by targeting the absolute worst stocks in America – stocks that deserve to fail.

And over the past year, the big money has been in chasing down these decrepit stocks.

If you want to learn how to make insane amounts of money – and if you’re ready for someone to tell it like it is – go here now.

The post This Is How the Pros Play the Facebook Lows appeared first on Wall Street Insights & Indictments.

About the Author

Shah Gilani boasts a financial pedigree unlike any other. He ran his first hedge fund in 1982 from his seat on the floor of the Chicago Board of Options Exchange. When options on the Standard & Poor's 100 began trading on March 11, 1983, Shah worked in "the pit" as a market maker.

The work he did laid the foundation for what would later become the VIX - to this day one of the most widely used indicators worldwide. After leaving Chicago to run the futures and options division of the British banking giant Lloyd's TSB, Shah moved up to Roosevelt & Cross Inc., an old-line New York boutique firm. There he originated and ran a packaged fixed-income trading desk, and established that company's "listed" and OTC trading desks.

Shah founded a second hedge fund in 1999, which he ran until 2003.

Shah's vast network of contacts includes the biggest players on Wall Street and in international finance. These contacts give him the real story - when others only get what the investment banks want them to see.

Today, as editor of Hyperdrive Portfolio, Shah presents his legion of subscribers with massive profit opportunities that result from paradigm shifts in the way we work, play, and live.

Shah is a frequent guest on CNBC, Forbes, and MarketWatch, and you can catch him every week on Fox Business's Varney & Co.

Read full bio