B O G U S.
What are you going to do if you are exercised?
What is RIO, near $120 these days?
Say you write a naked put at a strike of $100, it falls to $90.
You pay 100 x 1000 (ASX puts are in 1000 bundles I believe as opposed to US 100 bundles). So you need $100k to cover your purchase. You have several k plus premium, probably not enough to cover the net difference, let alone cover being exercised initially.
Yeah I would monitor the position and close out to stop losses at a certain point, so i would never let myself be exercised. So is there a broker around here somewhere?
I thought that a good strategy might be to write conservative out of money naked calls (or puts i suppose) for such stocks as BHP and RIO, because their premiums are higher than lower priced stocks. The risk is also less than if I tried to get that premium from a lower priced stock.
dazers said:Yeah I would monitor the position and close out to stop losses at a certain point, so i would never let myself be exercised. So is there a broker around here somewhere?
MRC & Co said:But man, at least buy several grand (if you have several grand in the bank) worth of a decent stock which pays a decent dividend and write covered calls over a 6 month period or so if you want to generate some income in this environment
Your advocating covered calls which is a synthetic short put, which was what dazer was asking in the first place.
Yes, I have heard this before, but it confuses me!
A covered call, how can he loose money? Is it not impossible to end up worse than when you begun? You will only miss out on any further profits above your strike?
As opposed to a naked put? Where anything below will cost you the difference out of pocket?
MRC & CO
Is that your pic in the Avatar?
Trading naked options is a great way to ruin yourself.
Yeh, I see what you mean mazzatelli1000, however, the big difference for me is, the stock is not likely to go bankrupt if you are buying a blue chip.
If you sell a naked put, and the price falls, you HAVE to pay the difference. If you sell a covered call, and the price falls, you won't be exercised and you can hold. Say BHP for example, it is not going to go bankrupt, will just experience swings, so I know where I would rather be placing my money if I write a strike of 50, it now falls to 30 in 3 months and the option expires. Would rather the call any day of the week.
But again, then you become an 'investor'.
What some people do is sell dozens of contracts WOTM, oblivious to the MASSIVE gamma and potential delta they are taking on.I also agree, naked calls and puts and their risks are MASSIVELY over-rated for those who are willing to simply buy and hold the equivalent shares.
How many HIH covered callers may have thought of the same thing?If you sell a covered call, and the price falls, you won't be exercised and you can hold. Say BHP for example, it is not going to go bankrupt, will just experience swings, so I know where I would rather be placing my money if I write a strike of 50, it now falls to 30 in 3 months and the option expires. Would rather the call any day of the week.
Yep, no disagreement there.
But if you were a long-term holder, what opportunity cost do you miss out on? You were holding the same stock anyways, so at least your loss is marginally smaller due to the addition of the premium.
You really only loose if the stock moves above strike + premium, but that is the trade-off as we all know. No trade will always give you an outright benefit without a negative.
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