As the termination news on the Penn National Gaming (PENN) merger hits
the wire on July 3rd, I realized that I need to bring closure on one of my
trading ideas. In my previous PENN
merger arbitrage post, I entered into a ”paper-trade” hoping to capture +20%
return on 419 shares. Since then, the credit crunch hit this trade in full force
dropping the PENN stock price to a trading range of $40-$45/share for about 3
months and then recently pushing the price to approximately $30/share.
Here is the latest 6 month stock price chart:

Updating my trade details for the closing price on July 3rd, the results are
ugly….
- Sell 419 shares at $29.66 with a $10 trade commission equals $12,418
- Less my original investment of $25,003
- Net Gain / (Loss) = $(12,586) or (50.3)%
- S&P 500 % gain in the same time period was 17.7% gain
Overall, this is why I have a “paper-trade”
account to make sure I understand all of the risks and rewards of a particular
strategy and remember these lessons learned when I establish my real money
account. With these results, I question how do the hedge funds that employ
merger arb strategies protect themselves with the real money accounts? Do they
use put options or balance all of the merger arb bets within a larger portfolio…