Showing posts with label short put. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short put. Show all posts

Bullish options strategies for value investors



Bullish options strategies provide value investors a great set of tools to implement a bullish bias in their portfolios with time limits. It is also possible to implement strategies that mimic the level of bullishness you would like to see reflected in the portfolio. Below are the strategies that can be used:

Strongly bullish strategies:

The simplest bullish strategies involve buying calls or selling puts. Long calls or short puts on one of the ETFs covering the major markets (SPY, VTI, QQQ, etc) can be used to build a strong bullish bias that will correlate with the specific market as a whole. However investing in derivatives of the major market indexes has downsides including the fact that it is suitable only when the markets have bottomed out – determining the exact bottom is a gamble best avoided. So, it is best to use a series of non-correlated securities to implement this strategy in your portfolio. The classic dilemma that face value investors using long calls or short puts as a strategy is deciding how much to commit and timing.

Value investors generally have the defining characteristic that they are risk-averse. Basically, they are willing to sacrifice some portfolio performance, if there is a sizable reduction in the associated risk. For this reason, long calls should be preferred over short puts by value investors, as the downside is very high – you can loose a lot more than the premiums received. The only time when it makes sense for value investors to use short puts is as a chance to initiate a long position at a future point at a reduced cost compared to the current market price – the strategy has the downside that assignment is not guaranteed but atleast the premiums will be yours to keep, if that scenario plays out.

Long calls are not a compatible strategy either for risk-averse investors as they represent capital at risk - one of the outcomes of such positions is the loss of all the monies committed to the strategy. So, value investors have to come to terms with this basic fact before committing monies. Given the risk-averse philosophy, it is best to aim to keep no more than a maximum of 2-4% of their total portfolio value invested in long calls.

Deciding on the timing aspect is more art than science. It is however vital as you stand to lose all the capital if what you foresaw plays out a few days/weeks after the expiry date of your position. It is a fool’s game to predict the exact timing of anticipated positive outcomes for a security price. Even when some anticipated event occurs, macro situations can drive the security in the opposite direction temporarily. Even so, chances of success are higher when positioning based on anticipated events/dates: earnings announcement, new product announcements, litigation result, regulatory approval, and favorable macro environment.

Moderately bullish strategies:

The Holy Grail with a long call position is unlimited upside. Long call positions can be altered to a moderately bullish position by using an opposite position that reduces the overall cost. The classic way to do this is using bull call spreads – it allows reducing the cost of a long call option position by using an opposite position that limits the potential upside. Reducing the duration of the contract will also reduce the cost but that is not usually possible - value investors need to incorporate a good margin for error in their estimate of the timing of the bullish scenario playing out.

The bane of short put positions is its large downside risk. The bullish position can be altered to a moderately bullish position by using an opposite position that limits the downside risk. The classic way to do this is using bull put spreads – it allows reducing the downside risk of a short put position by using an opposite position that limits that downside.

  1. Bull call spreads: Bull call spreads involve combining a long at-the-money (ATM) call position with a short out-the-money (OTM) call position (higher strike price) on the same security, in the same quantity, and using the same expiration month. You are in effect sacrificing some potential upside of your long call position by collecting some premium upfront from a corresponding short call position that is far enough out of the money so that if you are assigned, you still exit with a very good profit. As an example, say Google (GOOG) is trading at $600 and your research indicates that analysts may be overly pessimistic of the company’s prospects for next quarter. So, you bought a call option on Google (GOOG) shares at a strike price of $600 for $30 (premium of $3000) expiring next month immediately after earnings. The analyst expectations shifted as the earnings date approached and the sentiment change resulted in the stock trading at $640 two weeks from earnings. At this point, you estimate the upside is now somewhat limited to $660 or so. A good way to reduce the cost of your original position at this point is by establishing a new short long position at a strike price of $660 at 20 (premium of $2000). In effect, you have managed to reduce the cost of your original long position from $3000 to $1000 while sacrificing the upside over $660. If the stock trades above $660 at expiry, your gains are limited but still very good: ($660-$600)*100-$1000=$5000. There is not much downside protection other than the fact that you reduced the risk capital from $3000 to $1000. The classic bull call spread strategy involves simultaneously buying ATM calls and selling OTM calls on the same security and expiration month, rather than waiting for a period of time to establish the latter position. The cost reduction will be lower when using that strategy as far-out-the-money calls will have very limited premiums associated with them.
  2. Bull put spreads: Bull put spreads involve combining a long at-the-money (ATM) put position with a short in-the-money (ITM) put position (higher strike price) on the same security, in the same quantity, and using the same expiration month. You are in effect reducing the downside risk by sacrificing some premium to purchase a protective put.  As an example, say Google (GOOG) is trading at $600 and your research indicates that analysts may be overly pessimistic of the company’s prospects for next quarter. So, you sold an ITM put position at $630 for $35 ($3500 premium) expiring next month, immediately after earnings –the idea is to keep the premium, when your bullish prediction plays out. The position has no downside protection. For example, if the stock dropped to $500 at expiry, you stand to loose a whopping $9500 (630-500-35), almost three times the premium received. To avoid this situation, you buy an at-the-money (ATM) put position simultaneously at $600 for $10 ($1000 premium). In this scenario, if the stock dropped to $500 at expiry, you loose only $500 ($9500 – $9000). The cost of reducing this downside risk was the put premium of $1000 you paid for the long ATM put position.

The bull spreads above are called vertical spreads as the strike price is used to implement the spread. A variation that uses the expiry to implement the spread is called calendar spreads. Longer term long calls are offset by short-term short calls.

Mildly bullish strategies:

Long positions represent a strong bullish stance on the company concerned. The strong bullish stance of a long position can be reduced to a mild bullish stance by selling covered calls. Out-of-the-money covered calls are preferred unless you think the stock price is already over-extended. The covered call premium provides a small amount of downside protection. Also, out-of-the-money covered calls provide a way to exit the stock at a nice profit, if the stock goes up. There is no downside protection beyond the call premium realized upfront. Premiums go up as the time to expiration increase but chances of getting assigned also increase. Also, a series of shorter term option positions realize more premium income compared to a leap position of same duration and so in most situations going with shorter-term duration (three months or less) is the most beneficial when implementing this strategy.

Basics of Options and Futures for Value Investors


Introduction:


Options and Futures are both zero-sum in the sense that for every winner there is a corresponding looser. They are both contracts between buyers and sellers.

Options are contracts between buyers and sellers whereby the buyer (long) gets the right to buy (call) or sell (put) a particular security at the strike price from the seller (short). The buyer pays the seller a premium for this privilege upfront which is the price of the contract. 100 shares of a security is equivalent to one contract.

Futures are contracts between buyers and sellers whereby the buyer (long) is obligated to buy a particular commodity at the pre-determined price from the seller (short) on a particular date. To enter a contract, you need to deposit an initial amount into the margin account (usually 5% to 10% of the contract value), called the initial margin – the contract does not have a premium as such. The account is credited or debited from/to every day based on contract price changes. In addition to the initial margin, there is also a maintenance margin requirement, which is the lowest amount an account can reach before needing to be replenished. One contract stands for an amount of commodity that is different for each commodity. For example, for the E-Mini S&P futures contract is valued at 50-times the value of the S&P 500 stock index. So, based on the current S&P 500 index value of 1370, one E-Mini S&P futures contract has a value of 1370*50=$68,500.

What do the terms “long put”, “short put”, “long call”, and “short call” mean w.r.t. Options?


The put buyer is short on the underlying asset of the put, but long on the put option itself. That is, the buyer wants the value of the put option to increase by a decline in the price of the underlying asset below the strike price. The writer (seller) of a put is long on the underlying asset and short on the put option itself. That is, the seller wants the option to become worthless by an increase in the price of the underlying asset above the strike price. Generally, a put option that is purchased is referred to as a long put and a put option that is sold is referred to as a short put. Similarly, a call option that is purchased is referred to as a long call and a call option that is sold is referred to as a short call.

Who can be assigned and when?


Assignation is a trade that happens between the buyer and the seller of an option at the request of the option buyer to exercise his option position. As such, only the option seller can be assigned – ie, the seller is made to either buy (call option) or sell (put option) the security at the strike price as a result of the buyer exercising the option any time before expiration date. The logic is straight-forward: The option seller sold the right to buy (call option) or sell (put option) the security at the strike price to the option buyer. As such the right to assign is with the option buyer.

How to close an option and what happens between the buyer and seller?


Closing an option position is a transaction that happens between the closer and the exchange, not the counter-party when you opened the position. Basically, when doing a “Buy to Close” or “Sell to Close” against an open option position in your brokerage account, what happens is you are doing an offsetting transaction to exit the trade.

Intrinsic Value and Extrinsic Value (“Time Value”) of Options:


Intrinsic value is the money that can be realized, if exercised. Example: Assume stock ABC is trading at $30 and a call option with a strike price of $25 is trading at $7. Then, if the option is exercised, the amount realized is $500 per contract – so, $5 is the intrinsic value.

Extrinsic value or “Time Value” is the difference between the option price and the intrinsic value, when it is trading more than the intrinsic value. In the above example, $2 is the time value. 

Out-the-money options have 0 intrinsic value and a positive time value. So, if ABC stock is trading at $25 and call option with a strike price of $30 is trading at $1, the intrinsic value is 0 and the time value is 1.

One strategy for short-term traders involves capturing the time value. Time Value decays faster as the expiry date approaches. For this reason, such traders prefer at-the-money near-term (1-week to a max of 60 days or so) options. At-the-money is preferred because time premium is highest with at-the-money options. On the other hand, that strategy has minimal down-side protection. Some protection can be achieved while sacrificing some time premium by choosing deep in-the-money options with “decent” time premium.

Implied Volatility (IV), Statistical Volatility (SV), and Theoretical Value (TV) (“fair value”) of Options


SV is a measure of how rapid price changes have been. IV is a measure of what the market expects the price to do. They are both numbers between 0 and 100, higher numbers imply higher volatility.

The derived value of the option price when plugging in the SV into an option pricing model is the theoretical or fair value of an option. The difference between the theoretical value and the actual value of an option is known as option mispricing.

Practical Use

  1. It is good to sell options when IV > SV (market price is higher than theoretical price) and buy options when SV > IV (theoretical price is higher than market price),
  2. Options are cheaper to buy when volatility is lower,
  3. Options bring more premium when volatility is higher,
  4. Implied volatility increases when the macro sentiment is bearish and vice-versa – this is because of the belief that bearish markets are more risky than bullish markets.

Delta, Gamma, Vega, and Theta – “The Greeks”


These are measurements of risk for an option position.

How do Options and Futures differ?


Margins in Futures vs Premiums in Options:


Margins are specific to Futures while premiums are specific to Options –

  1. Margin – these are financial guarantees (5% to 10% of contract value) required of both buyers and sellers of futures. Since, the guaranty is only a small percentage of the total contract value, there is very large leverage allowing large gains or losses.
  2. Initial Margin – paid by both the buyer and the seller of a futures contract into the margin account.
  3. Maintenance Margin – the lowest amount an account can reach before needing replenishment.

Premiums are the payment that the buyer makes to the seller when entering an Options contract.

Risk in Futures vs Options:


Options - the maximum risk for the buyer of an option is the premium amount while the maximum risk for the seller is unlimited (call – there is no limit to how much a stock can go up) or limited (put – the risk is limited as the stock cannot go below zero).

Futures – the maximum risk for the buyer of a futures contract is limited to the total contract value while there is unlimited risk for the seller. Because of the leverage, the risk for both the buyer and the seller is very large. 

Obligation in Futures vs Right in Options:


Upon expiration, buyers of futures contracts are obligated to buy the underlying commodity from the seller of the contract, independent of the price of the commodity. For most contracts, settlement is in cash and so there is no physical delivery of commodity. Also, price differences are settled daily, which means margin calls can occur any day.

Upon expiration, buyers of options contracts have the right to exercise their option contract, but they are not obligated to do so.

Versatility in Options vs Futures


Options are much more versatile as you can construct option positions that profit in all directions while futures are uni-directional – you can profit only in one direction.


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