Friday 12 February 2016

PHILOSOPHY BEHIND WRITING COVERED CALLS

COVERED CALL WRITING is a popular strategy among individual investors. It has also attracted the attention of mutual fund and ETF managers and there are a number of funds that use covered call writing as part of their investment strategy. I would offer a short list, but I do not want to recommend that anyone use such funds. 
If you have the time and willingness to trade your own money (as millions of stock investors do), then writing covered calls is something to consider.
It is not a good investment choice for everyone. 
When writing covered calls, stock selection is the single most important factor in determining your success or failure. Yes, selecting which option to write plays a big role in your performance, but if you own stocks that under-perform the markets on a regular basis, then you cannot expect to earn much (if any) money.
WHO WOULD WRITE COVERED CALLS?
Covered all writing begins with stock ownership and this article is written for such stockholders. It presents the pros and cons of adopting covered call writing (CCW) as a small or substantial portion of your investment portfolio.
CCW is also used by investors who have no current position in the individual stock, but who would buy shares with the intention of writing options and collecting the premium.
WHY WOULD ANYONE WRITE COVERED CALLS?
As with any other trading decision you must compare the advantages and disadvantages of the strategy and then decide whether the risk vs. reward profile suits your investment goals.
WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO GAIN?
·         INCOME. By selling one call option for each 100 shares of stock that you own, you collect the option premium. That cash is yours to keep, no matter what happens in the future.

Thursday 11 February 2016

NEUTRAL STRATEGIES FOR THE NOVICE

Options are versatile investment tools. They can be used for both bullish and bearish strategies. But what separates options from all other investment tools is that they can also be used for neutral strategies. Those are appropriate when:
·         You do not have an opinion on market direction.
·         You believe that the markets will be relatively unchanged over the near term.
Let's discuss some of those strategies.
Note: This article is intended for the novice options trader. More experienced traders can find additional information by clicking the links below.
Market-Neutral Option Strategies
Important note: Unless you are a very experienced trader, always enter these orders as "spreads." A spread order tells your broker that
·         The order contains two or more different options (each option is a "leg")
·         The order requires that the broker fill each leg, and not just one. By  entering a spread order with two legs, you will never find that you bought or sold one of the legs.
If you don't know how to enter such orders, ask your broker's customer service department  how to enter an option spread order. 
Calendar Spread. The trader buys one option (call or put) and sells another option of the same type (i.e., call or put) with these restrictions:
·         The option bought expires after the option sold (i.e., it is "longer-dated")
·         The underlying asset is the same for both options.
·         The strike price is the same for each option.
The longer-dated option always costs more than the near-term option.
Thus, the calendar is a debit spread.
Fact: Shorter-term options decay (i.e., lose value) more quickly than longer term options. (See Theta)
Rationale for buying a calendar spread: When time passes and the stock price remains essentially unchanged, the spread gains value because the option that you bought loses (or gains) value more slowly than the option that was sold.
Therefore, the price of the spread (the difference between the price of the two individual options) increases. This spread is appropriate when you believe that the stock price will remain near its current level.
Risk:
·         If the stock price moves far away from the strike price, then the spread loses money because calendar spreads are worth more when the options are at the money.
·         When the stock price runs higher, the nearer-term option gains value more rapidly than the option that you own (this is due to gamma).

Wednesday 10 February 2016

NAKED PUTS; CASH-SECURED PUTS

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Selling puts option for income and for buying stock below market price.
Put writing (put selling) is a conservative option strategy and is ideal when you want to buy stock below current market prices. Cash-secured means that there is enough cash in the account to buy stock if assigned an exercise notice.
SELLING NAKED PUTS; CASH-SECURED PUT OPTIONS
Selling puts is not a high-risk strategy. It is no more risky than buying stock.
Despite everything you may have heard to the contrary, put selling is a strategy worthy of consideration by almost every investor who buys stock. The very bullish trader who expects to see a large upward change in the stock price represents the single class of investor who should not sell puts.
PRUDENCE
The so-called "prudent investor" is told that buying stocks is a good and conservative investment idea.
That investor is also told that selling put options is far too risky. Let's compare two investors who make a trade today:
·         The stock buyer pays for the investment in three days, when the trade "settles." If the stock price moves higher, the trader earns a profit. If the stock price declines, the stockholder incurs a loss. Very straightforward and easy to understand.
·         The put seller collects cash upfront when making the sale. He/she puts up collateral (to meet the margin requirement) to guarantee his/her ability to pay for the stock -- if and when it becomes necessary. If the option expires worthless, the collateral is released and the trader keeps the cash premium as the profit.
In other words, the stock buyer pays for shares at the time of the trade and the put seller promises to pay for stock at a later date. They each have the same risk: If the stock price undergoes a steep decline, each loses money.  This is not a risky proposition for the put seller who understands that he must not sell more than one put for each 100 shares he is willing to own.
Selling too many puts is a risky proposition, but selling too many represents poor risk management skills by the trader. it is not a reflection on the prudence of the strategy.
The put seller agrees (a binding contract) to pay $30 (the strike price) for shares at a later date, but only if he is required to do so. He collects $100 (premium, or option price) for accepting this obligation.  If the stock rallies, both earn a profit. However, the stock holder's potential gain is unlimited while the put seller cannot earn more than the $100 premium that he collected.
If the stock price falls, the stockholder always loses money.
For the put seller to have any loss (assuming that the position is held until the options expire):
·         The stock price must be below the strike price ($30 in this example) by more than the premium.
          EXAMPLE: If the stock is $28, the put seller must pay $30 for the shares. Because they are trading at $28, that is a $200 loss. However, the $100 collected earlier offsets a portion of that loss.
          EXAMPLE: If the stock is $29.40, the put seller earns a $40 profit ($100 premium minus $60 loss on stock price).
·         The put seller often earns a profit when the stockholder loses money. This is the part of the strategy that makes it so appealing. You sell a put option (taking a bullish stance), the stock price declines, and you still earn a profit! 
          EXAMPLE: The stock price moves from $34 to $32 and the stockholder loses $200 for every 100  shares owned. The put seller makes money because the option expires worthless and the profit is $100 (premium collected). 
 Some terminology useful for traders who sell put options
·         ASSIGNED AN EXERCISE NOTICE. When the owner of any option elects to exercise her rights, then the account of a trader who has a short position in that specific option (i.e., XYZ Jun 20 '14 30 puts) is chosen at random and notified.  The notice informs the trader that the option owner exercised an option and that he has been assigned (via a random process) as the person who must honor the terms of the option contract.  
In simple terms: When your account is randomly chosen you must buy 100 shares at the strike price for each option assigned to your account. There is no way out of this. By the time you see your account in the morning, the shares have already been purchased.
·         NAKED PUT OPTION.  A put that is sold unhedged (no offsetting, risk-reducing positions) and the trader does not have enough cash in the account to pay for stock, if it becomes necessary. The trader must borrow that cash from his  broker (using margin).
·         CASH-SECURED PUTAn unhedged put sale, but the trader does have enough cash in the account to but stock, if it becomes necessary. 

Tuesday 9 February 2016

SELLING PUTS VS. BUYING CALLS

The bullish trader has a variety of strategies that can be adopted. Buying calls or selling put spreads are two of the most popular choices.
Let's look at the choices for the typical bullish option trader. The market is rising and he wants to makes some money from that rally. Not having a specific stock in mind, he decides to trade index options and chooses SPY, an ETF (exchange traded fund) that mimics the performance of the S&P 500 Index.
Using live data, it is Jun 12, 2014, 9:15 am CT. 
SPX is priced at 194.62.
Let's assume that we prefer options for which expiration Friday is Jul 18, 2014.

Our trader has a few possible choices. Keep in mind that most newer option traders prefer to buy out-of-the-money (OTM) options because they cost less than in-the-money options. More experienced traders understand that buying OTM options is a losing strategy over the longer term, but rookie traders have not yet reached that level of sophistication.
An at-the-money call option, the SPY Jul 18 ‘14 195 calls option costs $1.82, or $182 per contract.
Partial list of OTM options, and their premium (cost to buy):

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 196 call; $1.32

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 197 call; $0.98 

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 198 call; $0.68

Partial list of OTM put spreads and the premium available from selling them:

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 193/194 put spread; $0.39

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 192/193; put spread  $0.33

·         SPY Jul 18 '14 189/190 put spread; $0.20
Although there are other choices, let's assume that your choice is limited to these.
Call buyers, especially buyers of out-of-the-money calls must see the index price increase before they have any chance to earn a profit. That increase must come before the options expire, and the sooner the better.

Monday 8 February 2016

THOUGHTS ON TRADING IRON CONDORS

"BUY DLF 85 PUT @ .90 TGT 1.65/2.2"
The iron condor is an option strategy usually adopted by traders with some option trading experience. That is as it should be because managing these positions requires an understanding of how money is made and lost -- something that most novice traders are unaware that they have not yet learned.
Below are some of my thoughts about trading iron condors.
Is trading iron condors the same as gambling in the stock market?
·         If you open a randomly chosen iron condor, you are gambling. When choosing a specific iron condor, it is important to pay attention to the underlying asset, the premium collected (i.e., the maximum possible profit), the money at risk (position size and worst possible loss), and your willingness to own a market-neutral position
·         If you open an iron condor, but have an edge -- perhaps the implied volatility is very high, or there is a good reason to believe that the underlying asset will not be too volatile during the lifetime of the options -- then you are not gambling. However, because you must pay commissions to own the investment, you need a significant edge to place the trade.
·         If you open an iron condor based on a stock market prediction -- bullish, bearish, or neutral -- then you are gambling if your proven track record of predicting direction is poor. You are not gambling when you truly have a proven, successful, track record of predicting market direction. A 60/40 profit/loss record -- after commissions -- meets that need.