Waking Up To Volatility In Your Cup

 | Oct 24, 2012 01:42AM ET

Let’s back off of the day-to-day flow of headlines and look back five fiscal quarters: on July 11, 2011, the price of shares of Coffee Holding Co. (JVA) hit a short-lived peak, selling for $29.35. By August 8, 2011, the same shares closed at less than half of that. For a few days thereafter, though, a bounce seemed to be underway. Then, on August 30, according to an 8-K filing, JVA “became aware that there is certain information in the marketplace regarding its operating results,” so it filed preliminary sales data with the SEC. But the data was bad news. So: why the upward move in the three weeks before that filing?

The run-up came about because speculators speculated on other speculators. In the first half of 2011, 86 percent of JVA’s profits had come from its own gains in coffee options. It was an operating company attached to a prop desk, and the prop desk was doing quite well.

So speculative success made it a target of other speculators, long and short.

By this spring, 2012, it had become clear though that JVA had now tied its fate to that of Green Mountain, and the two have fallen and risen in concord.