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A Black Swan that causes a bank holiday? You have, unless I read that incorrectly, a naked credit option position that you wrote. If it were a debit your risk is limited to 100% of your investment, but that is definable.trader0303 wrote:I know there are some options traders here, so I thought I'd ask...
I've been doing a very simple options strategy for a few months and have had success, and it seems too "low risk" that I must be overlooking something.
I sell a call above the stock price, and sell a put below stock price betting that the stock will stay in the range, and both will expire worthless.
I manage it by if the stock reaches my call price I buy the stock, and sell it if it goes back into my "range" . Inversely if it falls to my put price I short the stock, and cover my short when it rises back above my put price.
So, even if it goes out of my range, my risk is covered. I do this when I have the cash in the account to cover buying or shorting the stock to manage position. What am I missing besides overnight gaps?
SWalsh, okay you bring up a very good point that makes me second guess my "brilliant" plan. Thanks for the reply But the way I see it.....holding an equity overnight exposes you to the same "black swan" event. Do you never hold an equity overnight without a protective corresponding option?SWalsh wrote:A Black Swan that causes a bank holiday? You have, unless I read that incorrectly, a naked credit option position that you wrote. If it were a debit your risk is limited to 100% of your investment, but that is definable.trader0303 wrote:I know there are some options traders here, so I thought I'd ask...
I've been doing a very simple options strategy for a few months and have had success, and it seems too "low risk" that I must be overlooking something.
I sell a call above the stock price, and sell a put below stock price betting that the stock will stay in the range, and both will expire worthless.
I manage it by if the stock reaches my call price I buy the stock, and sell it if it goes back into my "range" . Inversely if it falls to my put price I short the stock, and cover my short when it rises back above my put price.
So, even if it goes out of my range, my risk is covered. I do this when I have the cash in the account to cover buying or shorting the stock to manage position. What am I missing besides overnight gaps?
What happens if the market closes and the stock opens 50% lower? Nassim Taleb, PhD mathematician and money manager who wrote about Black Swan events, always had some type of coverage in the event the unforeseeable happened. There's no need to answer this exactly, but what happens to you, financially, if the market is closed for a week? BTW, he does not define the collapse of the WTC as a Black Swan. After 1993 I predicted they would fly planes in the next time. A friend of mine was retired Secret Service and had escaped the fall by evacuating. On a boat over to NJ he called me to apologize that he had laughed at me often for thinking such a thing could happen. What could happen now? I have no idea. But I chose to not write naked options.
This is what I got on IWM, one more push, a little strong one. I don't see it will be done today unless they try to gap MondayHarapa wrote:IWM is looking good. Break out of what looks like a bullish flag could be significant.
What do you think of the bullish flag idea?BullBear52x wrote:This is what I got on IWM, one more push, a little strong one. I don't see it will be done today unless they try to gap MondayHarapa wrote:IWM is looking good. Break out of what looks like a bullish flag could be significant.
lets do this! all in baby!jarbo456 wrote:ok...who wants to buy TVIX with me now?
what an f'n nutty asset...is it now trading below implied value?Richarab wrote:lets do this! all in baby!jarbo456 wrote:ok...who wants to buy TVIX with me now?