Be on the lookout for corrections and additional entries into airlines on any weakness. Given that "Warren Buffett SUPPORT" is down about 10% for these stocks, you may want to be prepared to buy on corrections. Alternatively, look to sell 6-month put options 10% out of the money for premiums of 5%-7%. I believe this is a reasonable way to capture decent risk-adjusted returns for the upcoming 12 months. If Airlines go down, the put option will enable a seller to "put you" the stock at the predetermined strike price and you will end up with your position. Options are tricky though, so it will have to be below the strike price at expiration to give you the highest likelihood of buying the shares. If you don't end up with shares after expiration, then you have earned the premium you collected at the beginning of the trade. In a world of nearly zero interest rates and less than 2% dividend yields, a 5% return for 6 months isn't too bad. Annualize that out and you have a 10% return for insuring against a 10% drop in airline stocks. Sure, we can get a big decline, but as it stands now, airlines are earnings well north of 10% returns on capital, which is enough to attract the likes of Warren Buffett in the first place. He will be buying on dips, most likely, and unless something drastic changes from a regulatory or economic standpoint, I think this is the way to approach it. Nov 17, 2016 8:39AM EST