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Options Traders Report ‘Unusual Inflows’ Into Dollar Tree Stock (DLTR)

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After years of miscues and misfortune, circumstances are finally brightening for discount retailer Dollar Tree (DLTR). The business is now effectively unshackled, thanks to the company’s decision to divest struggling Family Dollar for just over $1 billion. Adding to the enthusiasm for DLTR stock, CFO Stewart Glendinning recently purchased a significant number of shares.

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<em>Dollar Tree store in Johnson City, Tennessee</em>
Dollar Tree store in Johnson City, Tennessee

Glendinning acquired 17,000 shares valued at almost $1.24 million. It’s not every day that an executive drops more than a million into the enterprise they run, adding an exclamation mark to the transaction. On a broader level, the interpretation is straightforward. People sell securities for a variety of reasons, many of them mundane. When they buy, it’s for one reason — they believe the position will rise in value.

Dollar Tree (DLTR) Insider Trading Activity
Dollar Tree (DLTR) Insider Trading Activity

Still, there’s criticism that Dollar Tree’s turnaround effort and Glendinning’s insider buy represent yesterday’s news. The market is forward-looking, while DLTR stock has already gained almost 23% in the past thirty days. A reversion to the mean is a very tangible possibility.

At the same time, unusual options activity — particularly the character of recent transactions — implies that this rally may still have some legs left. Therefore, I am bullish on DLTR stock.

Unusual Options Activity Points to Sustained DLTR Momentum

Whether you trade options or not, it’s essential to consider the action in this arena. Why? Simply put, it’s a market within the market, a sort of speakeasy for sophisticated market participants. Options traders give away their intentions by taking leveraged wagers on what might happen, while counterparties underwrite the risk that it won’t happen.

That’s the beauty of TipRanks’ Unusual Options Activity screener: the data readout delivers the important transactions and ignores the ones that aren’t.

Following the close of the April 17 session, a swarm of call options swept through the derivatives market, covering several options chains throughout this month and next. Most notably, thousands of calls were purchased for the April 25 expiration date and several hundred for May 23. Strike prices ranged from $80 to $85.

Dollar Tree (DLTR) price history over the past 5 days
Dollar Tree (DLTR) price history over the past 5 days

To use the lexicon, these calls are out of the money (OTM), meaning they have no intrinsic value (since there’s no point in exercising the right to buy an $80 call if the security in the open market is $79). Instead, these calls at the time of writing have extrinsic or time value only. Therefore, the speculation is that before expiration, the underlying security will rise above the strike price plus the premium paid for the option.