Welcome to NexusFi: the best trading community on the planet, with over 150,000 members Sign Up Now for Free
Genuine reviews from real traders, not fake reviews from stealth vendors
Quality education from leading professional traders
We are a friendly, helpful, and positive community
We do not tolerate rude behavior, trolling, or vendors advertising in posts
We are here to help, just let us know what you need
You'll need to register in order to view the content of the threads and start contributing to our community. It's free for basic access, or support us by becoming an Elite Member -- see if you qualify for a discount below.
-- Big Mike, Site Administrator
(If you already have an account, login at the top of the page)
I have been doing some research on DTE of options. I found the following info enlightening.
I choose 3 options on the worst day to sell them. 9/19/14. Right before a 157 drop in ES over 18 trading days. They are all about a 3.00 delta.
A lot of info in that chart.
The margin (IM) at entry was close for all 3. But the entry price was different. This caused the IM / Entry Price (IM/1.00 Price on chart) to be higher. So more margin per 1.00 of premium price for the closer to expiration options.
The increase in premium for all 3 by 10/15 was about the same. But the increase in IM (IM Diff) was vastly different. The Nov 1670 put had its' IM increase by 1303 while the Dec & Jan options only increased by 773 & 713.
The reason for the large difference in IM increase is that the IV for the Nov put was increased by 6.2%. The Others were 4.6% & 4.0%. This is due to the fact that the further out in time options are further OTM. Thus IV increases slower on them even though their IV was higher to start.
Because of the larger increase in IM, the Nov option went on margin call (Lowest Buying Power) on 10/15/14. The 2/3 cash excess did not cover the increase in IM and the loss on price. But the other two did not go on margin call.
The Net Profit at 50% exit is computed using 6.12 per RT cost and exiting on the first day the option settled below 50% of the Entry Price. This is for a $100k account at the start. Even though the exit point came sooner on the Nov put, the ROI was slightly lower than Dec because of the higher IM per 1.00 of price at entry. Jan, because of being further OTM, took even longer to get to a 50% drop in price.
Using this info I am selling ES puts at 80-110 DTE. The Jan's were safer but had a lower ROI. There is also the problem of lower volume traded for puts that are 115+ DTE. Harder to get trades done.
I use the ES strategy presented by you for some weeks now - results are convincing. Again thank you for sharing it with us.
I thought about reducing risk and draw downs in general and on report days like last Friday, and would like to discuss the consideration to sell futures as a hedge for the short options. Here an example:
We assume to sell 100 short ES options with delta 0.03 and a price of 200 $. They are bought back at 50 % after one month (average). This gives a profit of 10,000 $ per month (disregarding fees).
We constantly hold one short ES future as partial hedge. This future was approx. 750 in March 2009 and 2100 in March 2015. Holding this short future over the period of 72 months would cause a loss of 938 $ per month.
This future would be a 33 %-hedge for the short options, and should reduce margin significantly. The cost for the hedge is less than 10 % of the profit made with option selling. This hedge would allow for selling more options at the same risk and margin or reducing risk and draw downs of the account (or both).
Testing this on a worst case scenario, on 9/19/14, if you sell 100 Dec 1590 ES puts (delta 2.96) the IM is $67,000. If you add one short ES future the IM for all positions is now $61,930. A decrease of $5,070 or 7.6%. That decrease would allow you to add 7 more puts. This makes IM $66,619.
On 10/15/14 the IM for these positions would be $149,362. The ES future would have increased in value by $7,855. The additional IM on the 7 extra puts would have been $5,411. So the profit on the ES future would cover the additional IM needed to cover the 7 extra puts. But it would provide very little hedge for the rest of the positions, $3,444.
But the 7 extra puts in this example would have made an additional $551.25 (excluding costs). Starting value of $157.50 each (3.15 premium), exit at $78.75 profit. This is less additional profit than the $938 per month loss you calculated would be if you held one short future.
Even if the profit was $100 per 7 extra options, the $700 is still less than the $938 loss on the future.
Since the drop in IM is not significant, it doesn't look like this is a worthwhile option.
If you didn't add any extra puts, the ES future would give you $5,070 extra IM coverage (lower IM), plus in this example, an additional $7,855 in profit on the futures drop. So $12,925 extra to ride out a move against you. At a cost of $938 per month to get this $12,925 extra coverage. I don't think it is worth it.
You should get the CME PC-SPAN program and play around with different scenarios to see if you can find one that works.
Thanks a lot for the detailed discussion. My conclusions:
Selling outright futures to add further puts does only make sense if the ES moves up significantly slower than in average or moves sidewards or downwards. In 2015 the move upwards was only 53 or 12-13 per month. This slow move upwards still would not make the concept profitable. Looking at the monthly chart there were no longer periods of sidewards movements. The chart moved either upwards or downwards. And in longer term downwards movements, eg. 2007 – 2009, it would probably be better to stop put selling.
Selling outright futures to hedge the options before an important report seems only to make sense, if we sell three futures (in this example) to get a reasonable protection. These futures would only be held for some hours until after the report. In about half the cases the hedge should be profitable, in the other half result in a loss. In the long run, there should be no significant profit or loss, but protection could be good for a low blood pressure …
I will let you know if I find a more promising version of this concept.
I am trying to understand options pricing, currently reading up on some great stuff written by LIFFE and also the CBOE. What I then get confused about is certain phrases when discussing them in short hand jargon, please see my examples:
Sold RXM5 149/157 strangle at 11 and 9 small 7.6% vol the call 11.4% - 10.75% the put with 10.5 days to expiry
Jun Bobl 127.75p trades 13.5-15 x 10k
July Bund 158.50c trades 6.5 x 5k
I cannot complete the puzzle here. Would someone be able to explain these to me please, it'll help a lot with grasping the fundamentals and following on some market comments I see.
Trading: Primarily Energy but also a little Equities, Fixed Income, Metals, U308 and Crypto.
Frequency: Many times daily
Duration: Never
Posts: 5,059 since Dec 2013
Thanks Given: 4,410
Thanks Received: 10,226
My interpretation would be
Sell the June 15 EuroBund 149/157 strangles (ie the 149 put and the 157 call) at 11 and 9 for small size.
This equates to a volatility of 7.6% on the call and between 10.75% and 11.4% on the put.
Options have 10.5 days before expiry.
June 15 Bobl 127.75 Put trades 10,000 times between 13.5 and 15
Sounds like OTC Broker speech (probably IM) to me?
Excellent, thanks. That makes things a lot clearer and I can look to read up in each individual part, ie the goal of selling a strangle. And yes, from the F.I desk although my focus will be energies
For my 1,771 July ES puts the monthly ROI if held to expiration was 2.4%. By getting out when premium was about 50% my actual monthly ROI on them was 6.3%. Average days held was 19.6. Average entry and exit prices were 3.12 and 1.51. All numbers are weighted averages.
When I was doing July puts I was doing some further OTM strikes for my ultra low risk accounts (mainly retirement money). Thus the lower entry price. For August I switched the ultra low risk accounts to same delta as my "regular" accounts but I am now using more excess for them. Instead of using 66% cash excess I am using 75% cash excess.
For example, if IM is $500 instead of having $1,000 excess, I now use $1,500 cash excess for my ultra low risk accounts. This lowers ROI but decreases chance of being forced out of contract.
None of the data above includes these positions with the extra excess.