Grinder
Don't feed the bear!
- Joined
- 12 March 2008
- Posts
- 367
- Reactions
- 0
jackson,
There's so many possible adjustments you could make, none more superior than others, all depends on your view at any given time & your comfort level. Manage your position closely & continue to ask yourself whether you still want to be in the trade as the underlying moves towards your strike. I tend to manage IC as a complete portfolio, looking to stay as delta neutral as possible across many strikes & different months. Run possible scenarios of what the underlying could do to your IC & model how different adjustments can change your R/R payoff then decide how comfortable you are with a new strategy.
Remmember, going wotm might have a higher probability of success but how will it effect your IC when the 'black swan' comes along? Payoff diagrams come in handy for these type of scenarios.
While your waiting for one of Waynes prolific posts, something to munch on.
Think about how you are going to manage your IC in the environment we are in, they tend to work best when there is little to no movement. Seeing that is not the case at the moment, you might want to think about tighter wings or heavier wings & be ready for adjustments.
Hi,
This is my first posting on the forum.
I have been writing naked Calls over the XJO for almost a year now with great success. They are far OTM and to date I have stuck with the direction of the market ...down...thus have not written Puts. The Put premiums are much more tempting but I have tried to be very conservative and not let GREED take over. (Although when I was using condors the income was insufficient!)
My research has shown that the probability of being hit at my strike is low (historically) but I am becoming more concerned that the market may jump up sharply in any given month once sentiment turns.
Does anyone know of a "black swan" that occurred and the market rose dramatically? ie. 1987 type shock
Hi All,
What are peoples thoughts on trading iron condors, is it a good idea to re-enter a short position after its been closed out ? (i.e. closing the short put on market surge then re-entering on a reversal) I’ve been trawling the net and it seems that this strategy is a no-no.
Any comments on this situation?
Hi All,
What are peoples thoughts on trading iron condors, is it a good idea to re-enter a short position after its been closed out ? (i.e. closing the short put on market surge then re-entering on a reversal) I’ve been trawling the net and it seems that this strategy is a no-no.
Any comments on this situation?
as a novice i have done what you have mentioned a number of times . in particular sto twice last month and also occasionally with lgl as well.
i think it boils down to your analysis at the time and whether you still hold the long as protection which would save on having to repurchase that extra insurance leg again
maybe also time left to expiration as premium may not be worth the risk if the is period is too short till exp
gary
added to this i sometimes question if i should just hold the short till exp as the doubleling up of fees to close then reopen another position in the same month can chew up the profits. i have procrastinated over this a number of times
I now manage my risk by being heavier on the wings (thanks grinder), .
I prefer to leg in, i.e. last week I set up the call leg of a May ex. position, and a partial put leg which will be finished of when the correction back to 3400 occurs..
G'Day Beenjammin,
In my case heavier on the wings i was referring to more contracts on the wings, it allows me to roll up in the same month if I have to.
Regarding the put leg I was referring to, I purchased 3/4 the amount of puts I normally have on but sold 1/4. I’m still feeling pretty bearish (in the short term) so I’ll complete the spread later next week if the correction happens.
What I’m doing seems unconventional, I’m open to criticism or hints.
G'Day Beenjammin,
In my case heavier on the wings i was referring to more contracts on the wings, it allows me to roll up in the same month if I have to.
Regarding the put leg I was referring to, I purchased 3/4 the amount of puts I normally have on but sold 1/4. I’m still feeling pretty bearish (in the short term) so I’ll complete the spread later next week if the correction happens.
What I’m doing seems unconventional, I’m open to criticism or hints.
G'Day Gary,
I purchase more longs in case the underlying moves to my danger zone, this allows me to close out the shorts and move them closer to the wings with a higher number of contracts, so the backspread turns into a conventional credit spread. BTW, i only do this on XJO.
Mazza, I assume the valley of death is the trough of a backspread (looking at a risk graph), what would be an example of gamma scalping?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?