The iron condor is a strategy that can be a good
introduction for beginning options traders to option selling. It can be a
relatively safe way to sell options because you can’t lose on both sides of the
trade. Here, you pick a likely trading range for an underlying asset and sell
out-of-the-money option spreads around that range, “If you collect a total
premium of $2 for selling two $5-wide spreads – both an out-of-the-money call
spread and an out-of-the-money put spread, your total risk is only $3 because
the commodity can’t go through both spreads at expiration. You have spread the
risk across a wider range of possible prices. If your trading range thesis
changes or volatility explodes and threatens to put one of the spreads
in-the-money, you can exit one or both spreads at any time. Collecting $2
against $3 of risk offers you a potential return on risk of 67%”.
The market outlook for the iron condor is neutral. “You’re trying to be strategic with your use of leverage. You’re trying to be systematic and probability minded, looking at what the best odds in the long run [are] if you did this consistently,”.
An iron condor can be entered from the short side or the long side, explains Charlie
The market outlook for the iron condor is neutral. “You’re trying to be strategic with your use of leverage. You’re trying to be systematic and probability minded, looking at what the best odds in the long run [are] if you did this consistently,”.
An iron condor can be entered from the short side or the long side, explains Charlie
“A trader who enters a short iron
condor is looking to profit from a range bound underlying asset. As long as the
underlying asset stays within the inside strikes by expiration, the trade will
be profitable. If it moves outside of the inside strikes by expiration, the
trader will take a loss, which could be as high as the difference between the
sold call/put and the purchased call/put”. A trader who enters a long iron
condor is looking for the exact opposite, or, a large move in one direction or
the other by expiration.
Dos and don’ts
As with any type of trading, with beginning options strategies, having a trading plan and having an exit strategy are crucial. “Everybody has a plan for when to get into a particular stock or index, but few think it through to the point of when to take profits or cut losses”.
As with any type of trading, with beginning options strategies, having a trading plan and having an exit strategy are crucial. “Everybody has a plan for when to get into a particular stock or index, but few think it through to the point of when to take profits or cut losses”.