Title: 5 Advanced Options Strategies
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25 Advanced Options Strategies
- Christopher Mercer
- Tradesight.com
3Introduction
- Experience and Tradesight
- Purpose of this seminar Options basic recap,
backspreads, strangles, layered strangle
backspreads, naked puts, and time spreads.
Dont be afraid.
4Options Definitions
- Calls The right to buy a certain stock at a
certain price (the strike price) through a
certain date (the expiration). - Puts The right to sell a certain stock at a
certain price (the strike price) through a
certain date (the expiration)
5Options Definitions
Each contract represents 100 shares of stock.
- Options expire on the third Friday of each month.
- A leg is one part of a multi-option strategy,
meaning different combinations of puts and calls
or different strike prices or expirations.
6Option Montage Example
- Calls ABC Puts
- Bid Ask Nov Strikes Bid Ask
- 9.10 9.40 20 0.45 0.60
- 4.90 5.10 25 1.40 1.60
- 2.10 2.30 30 3.50 3.70
- 0.55 0.65 35 6.70 7.00
- Stock is at 29 currently.
7Backspread Purpose
- Backspreads are a way to guarantee a gain once
the stock has moved in the right direction and
leave you open to further gain potential without
ANY downside risk.
8Backspread Timing
- Use a backspread strategy when you are in the
money on a option play already. This is done in
lieu of selling the option. There needs to be
enough time left before option expiration for the
stock to theoretically swing back past your
strike price.
9Backspread Mechanics
- If you are long a call and the stock reaches your
target, short the stock instead of selling the
call. You are effectively short the stock with no
risk and a guaranteed profit. - If you are long a put and the stock reaches your
downside target, buy the stock instead of selling
the puts. You are effectively long the stock with
no risk.
10CELG Long Trade
Initial Tradesight parameters on the stock
trigger is 16.25target is 18, stop is 15.15
11CELG Triggers
Stock triggers through 16.25 and hits 18 same day
for 1.75 gain.
12CELG Backspread
- Start the trade by buying the 15 call when the
stock triggers. At 16.25, the 15 call would be
1.25 plus some time premium. Lets say the call
is 1.60. - When the stock hits 18, that same option is
worth at least 3. You could sell it and make
1.40 per contract. - Instead, short the stock at 18.
13CELG Backspread
- You now have a guaranteed gain. You can exercise
the calls to own the stock at 15 plus the 1.60
that you paid (16.60). You have already sold the
stock at 18. There is a 1.40 gain that CANNOT
disappear. - At this point, the backspread is in place. Here
are the possibilities.
14CELG Backspread
- Possibility 1 The stock remains above 15
(strike price of the option). At expiration, the
option is turned into stock to offset the short,
and you end up with the 1.40 gain. - Possibility 2 The stock drops under 15. At any
point, you can buy the stock back to cover the
short and lock in a gain of more than 3. You
still own the option, which you bought for 1.60.
15Strangle Purpose
- The goal of a strangle is to make money on an
anticipated move in either direction on stock or
index. Strangles on indices can also be used as
hedges for large funds.
16Strangle Timing
- You enter a strangle either at a key technical
level that should either lead to a sharp drop or
bounce, or ahead of a key news event. The
downside of a strangle is no movement by the
stock or index, so there needs to be a solid
reason for expecting some sort of move.
17Strangle Mechanics
- Purchase equal numbers of calls and puts slightly
out of the money from the current trading price
of the stock. Your total cost basis is the cost
of the call AND the put. The trade is a winning
trade if you can sell either side of the trade
for more than you purchased both sides together.
18Strangle Examples
- An index pulls back or rises up to a key
technical support/resistance level. - A stock is waiting for a major news announcement
(i.e. Microsoft court ruling, biotech
announcement, sometimes earnings on key stocks).
19Strangle Issues
- Make sure that you add up the cost of both sides
of the strangle. It needs to be plausible that
one side could get to a value higher than the
cost of both sides. The QQQs are a great example
of where a strangle can work consistently. Its
also easier when the current price of the stock
is dead in the middle of two strike prices.
20When Not to Strangle
- You see a key support line on RDN, which it would
likely either breakdown under or bounce off of.
21RDN Strangle Conversation
- Calls RDN Puts
- Bid Ask Near Strikes Bid Ask
- 7.30 7.80 35 0.60 0.80
- 3.60 3.90 40 2.10 2.40
- 0.80 1.00 45 4.10 4.30
- 0.10 0.20 50 8.60 9.00
- Stock is at 41.52 currently.
22RDN Gaps Past Target
- RDN opens at 36.01 on bad news, past the target,
for 5.50 gain.
23Exiting Strangle
- If you had run the strangle, you bought the 45
calls for 1 and the 40 puts for 2.40, total of
3.40. This means the stock needs to reach either
36.60 or 48.40 to be guaranteed a winning
trade. - In this particular case, only because the stock
moved so far, you made a little money. This would
not have been an ideal strangle.
24QQQ Strangle
- Leading into possible war, the market is toying
with breaking a key level. No war good, leading
into war bad.
25QQQ Strangle
- Calls QQQ Puts
- Bid Ask Feb Strikes Bid Ask
- 1.70 1.80 23 0.45 0.50
- 1.35 1.45 24 0.70 0.80
- 0.70 0.80 25 1.20 1.30
- 0.20 0.25 26 1.60 1.70
- Stock is at 24.60 currently.
26QQQ Strangle
- The expectation is that a break of the
December/January lows is technically bad, and
leading into war, the market might drop back to
the October lows and fill the gap near 21.50 on
the QQQs. - Any positive news avoiding the war should lead to
a huge surge in the market. - The cost of the QQQ strangle is only 1.60. At
21.50, the puts would be worth at least 3.50, a
nice gain.
27Strangle Backspreads Purpose
- The purpose of a strangle backspread is to double
up your potential upside after you get in the
money on a strangle. You do this by using the
stock to close out one side of the trade instead
of just closing the one leg.
28Strangle Backspreads Timing
- Once your strangle reaches a profitable target
for one side of the trade, instead of selling
that side of the trade, buy or short the stock
instead.
29Strangle Backspread Mechanics
- You enter your strangle. Well use the QQQ
strangle example that we were talking about
earlier. The QQQs are 24.50, you buy the 24 puts
and the 25 calls for a total of 1.60. The
downside goal would be that the QQQs fill the gap
to 21.50 with four weeks to expiration. - Once the QQQs hit 21.50, the put is worth 3.50
or so. Go long the QQQs.
30Strangle Backspread Mechanics
- Now, you have a guaranteed gain on the whole
trade. You are long the QQQs at 21.50. You have
the 24 puts, so you can sell the QQQs at 24 at
any time through expiration. Thats 3.50. You
spent 1.60. If the QQQ stay under 24, thats
what you make. The calls expire, and the puts
offset the long position.
31Strangle Backspread Mechanics
- However, if the market runs up sharper than that,
you have the long on the QQQs AND the 25 calls on
the QQQs. At 26.50, the calls are worth 1.50 at
least, and the long position is 5 in the money.
The puts are worthless (0.80 lost) and the calls
cost 0.80. Basically, you can sell the stock and
calls for 6.60, and you put 1.60 in, so 5 gain.
32Naked Put Purpose
- The goal of a naked put is to make money on an
upward move in a stock without dealing with
specific technical entries, stops, and targets on
the stock itself. The downside of a naked put is
that you could end up owning the stock if it
declines.
33Naked Put Timing
- When a stock is at a point where you believe it
will be higher by option expiration, execute the
trade. One great way to time this is a stock
holding over a clear base in an upward trending
market.
34Naked Put Mechanics
- Sell the slightly out of the money puts. For
this, you receive the premium. If the stock
remains above the strike price, the puts expire
on the third Friday of the month, and you get to
keep the money that you took in. You can always
close the trade by buying back the puts. If the
stock drops under the strike by expiration, you
will be put the stock at the strike, minus the
premium received.
35SHFL Naked Puts
Very nice cup and handle base breaking out at 20.
36SHFL Naked Put Montage
- Calls SHFL Puts
- Bid Ask Nov Strikes Bid Ask
- 2.90 3.20 17.5 0.30 0.45
- 1.10 1.25 20 1.00 1.15
- 0.45 0.55 22.5 2.85 3.10
- 0.10 0.30 25 5.00 5.40
- Stock is 20.10 at long trigger.
37SCSC Naked Puts
- Long trigger 48.15, less perfect example, but
higher price
38SCSC Naked Puts Montage
- Calls SCSC Puts
- Bid Ask Nov Strikes Bid Ask
- 8.80 9.10 40 0.50 0.65
- 4.40 4.70 45 1.30 1.50
- 0.85 1.05 50 2.70 3.10
- 0.10 0.30 55 7.00 7.40
- Stock is 48.15 at long trigger.
39Time Spread Purpose
- The purpose of a time spread is to get involved
in one side of a trade over the course of more
than one option cycle, but get money back out of
the trade immediately at a closer timeframe,
ultimately leaving you with a call or put that
doesnt cost what it should.
40Time Spread Timing
- Time spread timing is tricky. The idea would be
to buy a put or call beyond the current month,
then sell the current month option of the same
type (put or call) at the same strike price. You
want the current month option to expire
worthless, and then have the stock move in the
right direction.
41Time Spread Mechanics
- Again, lets say that you like a stock on the
long side that is at 28, and were currently
sitting at February 1. You buy the March 30 call
and sell the Feb 30 call at the same time. If the
Mar 30 call costs 1.50 and you can sell the Feb
30 call for 0.70, then you are really paying
0.80.
42Time Spread Mechanics
- From here, you want the stock to stay UNDER 30
until the option that you sold expires. At
expiration, the call that you sold for 0.70 is
worthless, and you get to keep that gain,
essentially lowering your cost on the calls that
you own for another month out.
43Offshoot Strategies
- 1) Vertical strategies. With the stock at 28,
buy the 25 calls for March and sell the 30 Feb
calls against that to get some money back. If the
stock goes over 30, you get called away on the
ones you wrote at 30 minus what you brought in,
but you own the stock at 25 plus what you paid
for the other ones.
44Offshoot Strategies
- 2) Take one side of the trade, get in the money,
and then write the same direction with a
different strike. You like a stock at 14. You
buy the 12.50 calls for 1.80, and the stock
moves up to 16. Now you write the calls for the
same month at 15 strike for 1.60. If the stock
drops back under 15, you get to keep the 1.60
on the 15s, but still own the stock at 12.50
plus 1.80.
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