Options The Cash C.O.W. (Conservative Option Writing)

Imagine how much money you could have made had you sold every option that you have ever purchased? While many traders boast of huge profits attained from a singe long option play, these stories are rare in comparison to those in which traders have lost some, or all, of the premium paid for an option.

In a sense, option buyers are throwing good money after bad in hunt of that one big market move that could return extraordinary profits. Given the fact that markets spend most of their time trading in a range, it is easy to see why few traders experience the abnormal returns that drew them to the markets in the first place.

A less exciting, but more fundamentally sound approach would be to attempt to profit from markets that are trading in a range. The most efficient means of taking advantage of a "quiet" market is to strangle the current range by selling calls above technical resistance and puts beneath support levels.

The logic of a short option strategy, such as a strangle, is similar to that of insurance companies. Insurers collect premium on policies with the expectation of future payouts. By knowing the probability of a claim, they can calculate their expected return for assuming the risk of the policyholder. They are confident that over time they will profit despite their obligation to pay claims.

By nature, options are a depreciating asset. Just as a new car buyer will find that the value of their purchase diminishes once the automobile is driven off of the seller's lot, an option buyer will find that the time value of their long option erodes with every passing minute.

It should be obvious by now that selling options provides traders with an advantage over buyers. After all, a seller of a call option can profit in a declining market environment as well as a market that is trading sideways. In fact, it is possible for a seller of a call to also profit during times of increasing prices given that the market does so at a slow enough pace. A buyer can only profit on a call option if a market rallies over a specific price in a specific time limit.

Nonetheless, traders continue to be lured into long option strategies. This is likely due to the fact that purchasing an option provides traders with unlimited profit potential and the risk is limited to the premium paid. The peril in this type of approach, as mentioned before, lies in the fact that although one's losses are limited it is likely that an option buyer will lose some or all of the value of the option.

The exposure to unlimited losses by option writers is merely theoretical. In theory a market could go up forever, but it isn't likely. Additionally, while most markets can't go to zero (equities excluded), they can drop significantly. However, due to the leverage and risk involved it is imperative to have adjustment strategies in place before a position is executed.

Quick Refresher
An option premium is the actual market price of a particular option at a particular time. Thus it is necessary to understand the fundamentals to option pricing before implementing a short option strategy. The exact price that buyers and sellers are willing to accept at any given time is based on two major factors, intrinsic and extrinsic value.

Simply put, intrinsic value refers to whether or not an option is in the money and to what degree. For example, the intrinsic value of a call is the amount of premium by which the underlying market price is above the strike price (also known as exercise price). Accordingly, a put option is said to have intrinsic value once the market price dips below the strike price. An option with intrinsic value is ideal for an option holder, but creates an undesirable situation for an option writer. If a short option expires in the money, the writer will be assigned a corresponding position in the underlying market. In the case of a short call, the seller will be short the underlying from the stated strike price. Conversely, a trader with a short put will be assigned a long position from the strike price. It is often in the best interest of the option writer to offset a position prior to expiration in the case of an in the money option.

The extrinsic value of an option is a combination of several factors including the strike price relative to the underlying price, market volatility, time to expiration, and demand for that particular option. The goal of an option seller is to profit from the erosion of intrinsic value. Times of increased volatility provide ideal circumstances for option sellers because option premiums are inflated. Similarly, it is helpful to understand that the depreciation of extrinsic value tends to accelerate during the last 30 of an option's life creating an ideal scenario for option selling.

Know the Market Climate
Before executing short option trades, it is imperative that traders analyze the "climate" of the market. The three primary aspects of a market that should be considered are volatility, liquidity and technical indicators.
Perhaps the most important factor to be considered is the liquidity of the market. With the possibility of unlimited risk, traders must be able to easily liquidate an unfavorable position. Options in thinly traded markets tend to have relatively wide bid/ask spreads, which will exaggerate losses and reduce profits. Markets that offer traders ample amounts of liquidity include: stock indices such as the S&P 500 and fixed income such as US Treasuries.

Volatility is an important component of extrinsic value. Thus, during times of increased market volatility option premium tends to be inflated. This provides an advantage to sellers. Volatility can be determined by looking at indicators such as historic or implied volatility available on most charting software or by simply looking at a price chart.

Check the Conditions
Once a market is deemed to be suitable for option selling, a trader should scrutinize the technical condition in order to determine appropriate contract months and strike prices. Trading ranges as well as support and resistance levels should play a big part in short option placement.

Traders should obviously sell call options above significant technical resistance and sell puts below known support levels.
Even if a market succeeds in penetrating known support and resistance, it will likely stall before doing so. To a short option trader, time is money. As mentioned before, every minute that passes diminishes the time value of an option.

Depending on market conditions, it may not be appropriate to write strangles. The purpose of selling options is to increase the probability of success, thus picking tops and bottoms are counterproductive. If a market is entrenched in a definitive uptrend, it doesn't make sense to sell calls. Doing so will likely lead to an unfavorable scenario. On the other hand, selling puts is extremely attractive. Even if the market does reverse and go against the short put position it probably won't do so immediately. Remember, as time goes by, the extrinsic value of an options erodes, providing profits to the seller and losses to the buyer of an option.

Too many short option traders focus on their strike price relative to the underlying market price, when in reality they should pay more attention to the intrinsic break-even point of the trade. Although it becomes an uncomfortable position, options that are in-the-money experience accelerated time value erosion. As long as the market stays within the intrinsic break even it will be a profitable trade at expiration. Patience, combined with humbleness, is a virtue in short option trading. Even markets that are trending do not go straight up or down providing opportunities for exiting uncomfortable short option positions. Traders will find that liquidation out of panic is often not the best remedy to the situation.

Final Thoughts
As with any trading method or system, losing trades are inevitable when trading short option strategies. Thus it is important however to point out that there is substantial risk involved. Many option sellers fall victim to greed. Failure to cut losses short can put traders at the mercy of the market. While the odds of a profitable trade are in the favor of a premium seller, unlimited losses leave the seller extremely vulnerable. For this reason, adjustments and trading plans are crucial to maximizing the results and minimizing losses.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
LOL Bull. Thanks for an evening giggle. You are a special person.
 
Kiwi said:
LOL Bull. Thanks for an evening giggle. You are a special person.
============================================================

Kiwi,
My family also say the same thing sometimes :cheesy: !? especialy when i took the whole family [7 in total ] to Orlando Florida for two weeks and stayed in a four bed rm villa with pool, all expences paid by me of course! after all thats what GOOD special fathers do. :cheesy:

Does this mean you wont be answering the questions on brokers? [on my last post] :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:
Ducati,john,and others,

Just want to reiterate, i dont advocate SELLING NAKED POSITIONS. Just so you all understand what I'm saying.
Not every body has the same understanding how to handle naked positions when mrkts move in the wrong or erratic ways.

Just want to add some words in defence to the Author's comments below:

Peter once said [2nd book of Peter last 4 verse's]>> This statement is about Pauls writing:
If one does not have the same knowledge and understanding and wisdom as him? people WILL use his writings to their own DISTRUCTION!!!. This is why the Jehova's Witness's have made a MASSIVE MASSIVE ERROR in refusing blood transfusions to their LOVED ONES. Paul was saying OBSTAIN from BLOOD he was talking on the FOOD ISSUE! No food should be made from blood. The butchers sell black pudding sauseges made from animal blood. :devilish: :devilish:

So to get a full understanding of the Author you must first attain her/his level of understanding on the derivative markets and risk management and strategies ie naked writes. I hope this helps now when your read that Option book/books??. The Authors are rarely wrong. :LOL: :cool:

Bull
As i said b4 its easier to fool/decieve the majority than it is the minority.
 
Last edited:
IB Margin Overview .
[Sent in by employee of IB.]


IB calculates initial margin requirements at the time of each trade, maintenance margin requirements on a real-time basis, and Reg T margin at the end of each day, and will LIQUIDATE POSITIONS on a real-time basis if there is a MARGIN DEFICIENCY. Real-time margining allows IB to maintain low commissions because IB does not have to spread the cost of credit losses to customers like other non-automated brokers.

All of the calculations below as well as other real-time account statistics can be found in the TWS account window. For a detailed description of the account window and its underlying calculations, see the TWS User's Guide.

It should be noted that all liquidation are subject to the normal commission schedule. Advisor clients will not be subject to advisor fees for any liquidating transaction.

New Position Margin Calculations

Upon submission of an order request, a check is made against real-time available funds. If available funds including the order request >=0 the order is submitted, if it is negative the order is rejected. The following calculations are used to determine available funds:

Securities available funds = Securities equity with loan value - Securities initial margin requirement.

Commodities available funds = Commodities net liquidation value - Commodities initial margin requirement

In addition, you are required to have a minimum of $2,000 or USD equivalent of securities equity with loan value or commodities net liquidation value to open a new position.

Maintenance Margin Calculations

On a real-time basis, excess liquidity is checked to ensure that it's >=0, if it is negative the account is subject to liquidation on a real-time basis. The following calculations are used to determine excess liquidity:

Securities excess liquidity = Securities equity with loan value - Securities maintenance margin requirements

Commodities excess liquidity = Commodities net liquidation value - Commodities maintenance margin requirements

Reg T End of Day Margin Calculations

At the end of each US trading day (15:50-16:00 ET), a Special Memorandum Account (SMA) is checked to ensure that it's > =0, if it is negative the account is subject to liquidation. In addition, no cash withdrawal will be allowed that causes SMA to go negative on a real-time basis. SMA is calculated for all securities (stocks and options) regardless of country of trading as follows:

Special Memorandum Account=Maximum ((Equity with Loan Value - initial margin requirements*), (Prior Day SMA +/- change in day's cash +/- initial margin requirements**))

*
Calculated at the end of the day under US margin rules.
** Calculated at the time of the trade under US margin rules.
Margin Models

Margin requirements are calculated either on a rules basis or a risk basis.

For rule based margin systems, predefined, static calculations are applied to each position or predefined groups of positions (“strategies”). The following instruments are margined using rule based margins:

US stocks, index options, and stock options

Canadian stocks, index options, and stock options

Dutch index and stock options
The calculations for each of these products are described under the Trading/Margin pulldown menu.

For risk based margin systems, exchanges consider the maximum one day risk on all the positions in a complete portfolio, or subportfolio together (for example, a future and all the options delivering that future). The general calculation method is as follows:

Exchange assigns scanning ranges for price movements, volatility shifts, and other risk directions. The ranges are based on observations of historical performance of the underlying instrument.

Every instrument (stock/option/future) is valued over the ranges of price, volatility, etc. The resultant value matrix is distributed to Interactive Brokers on a daily basis.

IB values the (sub)portfolio over the matrix and determines the worst case scenario loss using standard models approved by the exchange.

The margin is calculated as the difference between the current portfolio value and the worst case value
Margin requirements for each underlying are listed on the appropriate exchange site for the contract. A summary of the requirements for the major futures contract requirements as well as links to the exchange sites is available on our Futures Margin Requirements page.

Restriction on Leverage

There is a real-time check on overall position leverage, as follows: The Gross Position Value cannot be more than 50 times the Adjusted Net Liquidation Value. Alternatively, this can be expressed as:

2% securities gross position value > Net liquidation value - Futures option value
Liquidations may occur if the Gross Position Value exceeds more than 50 times the liquidation value.

Universal Account

Although the Universal AccountSM should be viewed as a single account for trading and account monitoring purposes, for regulatory and segregation purposes, there exists a separate securities and commodities account. If there is a margin deficit in either your securities or commodities account, cash will be immediately transferred to protect the margin deficit. At the end of each day, any excess cash in your commodities account will be swept to your securities account.

Margin What Ifs

Margin "What Ifs" may be tested through the TWS Demo or by creating an order and choosing Check Margin under the Orders menu before you transmit an order.
 
Selling options

When the volatility is the highest, if one sells options. Is that the best way to sell options and make money on index options?

I want to find out the historical record of success in selling index options.

Also, as we all know that market makes major moves very few times, opportunity to sell options also exists few times ... Then, why to sell options?

-Ashish

ducati998 and silent.trader

May I ask both of you-Have you ever sold options or your opinion is just based on some theory?

I am not boasting but I have sold options for last 20 years. Initially I was only selling covered call options on UK shares . Commission was high with UK brokers,so I moved to IB

I sell options on indexes and on futures. In last one year there has not been a single assignment and I have not closed any loss making positions. Return on my capital employed for last year has been about 30%
 
You will have to be a brave man with deep pockets to sell indices options in these markets....you can do your absolute ar!e.

If you sold options naked from 2007 as a strategy rather than a hedge for say a long position, you clearly either are trading direction (of which case you HAVE to be right ie. selling calls prior to a big dump in dow say), or you have some cocunut sized cojunes for risk!

On the subject of margining, excgange stuff usually stresses your posn 3 standard deviations in underlyier movement and then stress the vol up and down at each futures point and then use the worst case scenario as a margin.
 
Ashish, your right, it's best to sell options in a high volatility environment ... with the expectation that volatility will go down by your expiration date.

For historical record of success you might want to start with CBOE - Home.

The "opportunity to sell options" exists every month, every year. Price, time and volatility are the 3 big determinants as to how much premium you will collect for the amount risk you are willing to take.
 
You have to think what high volatility also means though..... people are willing to pay for protection because they expect the spot to move violantly- you get rewarded with a higher premium but at what cost? Of course its a personal apetite for risk but look at the equity indices, the Dax traded 5000 in the New Year and a conservative sell would be the 1 month 4000 puts, probably collect upto 50 points of premium- guess what it traded down to 4050 last week - almost 1000 points off. The gearing and leverage on such a tiny put at the time would have you sh*tting bricks.

Be it far from me to suggest how one should trade, but all I wanted to add was that naked options writing in teenies (far OTM options) is far from simple money. I am an options market maker and conservatively writing options as put forward in this thread is known as slotting(selling) teenies in my fraternity - the phrase which accompanies this is 'picking up nickels on a train track', you maybe ok for a while or even for a long time but when that black swan comes up for air, kapow. it. will. hurt- at some point that train is gonna plough into you baby!
 
Last edited:
What do you think about selling puts way out-of-the-money -- scaling 2 to 4 strikes starting @ 2.00 standard diviations to 3.00 std. div. -- 30-35 days from expiration. Place a GTC stop limit order on each put at each stike at 1.5 to 2.5 times premium collected (depending on the imp. vol.); If stops are not your preferred method and your first strike becomes threatened then close that strike position and sell 1.5 times the number of puts just closed further out beyond your last strike (adjust and roll) ... providing there is more than 20 days left to expiration. Your comments?
 
I assume you are talking about puts in equity indices. Take a look at equity indices graphs over the last 12 months, notice anything, there are voilent moves down. Bring up accompanying implied vol, notice anything? Vol ge$ts bid through the roof in the way down- the market is panic mode.You lose money on delta, gamma and vega.

What you suggest is selling more options on the way down to keep spreading off the risk, this only increases the leverage against you and you could end up in a horrible pickle-eg, you are short the 7000 puts in the dow, If dow touches 7800 again and cracks through that level, where will it stop? are you gonna keep rolling puts down to 5000 on the biggest event in the last 50 years in the equity markets.....

You and others on this thread really need to understand the risk of options and in particular being short naked.
 
slik: "I assume you are talking about puts in equity indices." Yes, to be precise, the SPX Index.

I agree with all your comments.

What I did: "Place a GTC stop limit order on each put at each stike at 1.5 to 2.5 times premium collected" and I was stopped out.

When I trade naked I place my short put trades in the high probability neighborhood of 90%-95% ... and on rare ocassions you do get a black swan event such as last October's historic run up to the 85+ VIX readings. So, the win probabilities are high and the risk rewards are crummy (when they happen); however, one's losses should never exceed 1 to 2 times one's average months winnings.

And, once again slik, I agree with you that naked puts can be extraordinarily dangerous.
 
I don't wanna come across all preachy preachy in this thread its just that I wanted to share my own experiences- I have sold options on spread betting accounts and have regretted it!I just didnt want a novice to read this thread title and think selling strangles is easy money , that is all.

Anyway, best of luck with it Lance, you may be right in equities as the recent 8000 level in the dow is holding up nicely (even after torrents of bad news) so put selling maybe the right thing to do for the next week or two.
 
Interesting discussion.
Lance and Slik, you both seem to know what you are talking about.
What about the strategy of Lance of placing stops an a naked put on the SPX (or the Dow)? can it be always relied upon?
I mean if worst comes to worst there will still be enough liquidity to get out of the position with a decent slippage?
If this is the case it sounds to me like a pretty safe strategy to apply in a high IV environment if one is relatively bullish on the market or believe in a strong support
 
You are right if the right discipline is adhered to and you make sure that you get out on your preset limits. Liquidity and stops are not the problem, the problem is the discipline required to hit these stops- with options it is easy to run a short right until the strike is nearly breached; it is very easy to kid yourself that it is a paper loss only and the spot will expire without breaching the strike.

These teeny options are massively leveraged. If the spot goes anywhere near your short strike, the vol will explode (think about it, multi year lows on equity indices within a credit crisis). It goes without saying that if it does breach your short strike, you will have lost tens of multiples of the premium.
 
Last edited:
You are right if the right discipline is adhered to and you make sure that you get out on your preset limits. Liquidity and stops are not the problem, the problem is the discipline required to hit these stops- with options it is easy to run a short right until the strike is nearly breached; it is very easy to kid yourself that it is a paper loss only and the spot will expire without breaching the strike.

These teeny options are massively leveraged. If the spot goes anywhere near your short strike, the vol will explode (think about it, multi year lows on equity indices within a credit crisis). It goes without saying that if it does breach your short strike, you will have lost tens of multiples of the premium.

Thanks for your reply, but there is something I don't understand:
let' assume I short a put OTM on the February mini dow for $2 at 7000 strike and put a stop at $6. i.e. I am ready to accept a loss of 300% considering the low probabilty; in other word I keep doing in every month hoping that Armageddon will not happen more than once every 3 months.
If the market is liquid enough my stop should get me out of the position, maybe at $7 considering slippage. The increase in volatility in such situation should probably put my stop in play somewhere higher than 7000, maybe 7200, but my loss should still be limited.
Am I correct or I am getting it wrong?
 
It all depends on two 2 factors, 1) time remaining and 2)Volatility change on such a move.

If the spot moves from 8200 to 7700 say 3 days after you have sold the 7000 one month put, vol will go through the roof (7800 in the dow being the recent low), and in particular, puts will be bid to absolute riduclulas levels, teeny puts that were 10 -14 may well be 15-19, not so much with delta but with just general fear and people scrambling for puts as the spot has breached a big level.

In such situations, I will not advise having your stop at a futures level, as if it breaks beyond the recent low, it will be more than armageddon for ypou personally, it maybe bankrupt- if it breaches 7800, where will it stop? a 7000 put sold for a 100 points, will be worth 4-500 points if the dow trades 7200 in a week- it is an extraordinarily ballsy person that will be willing to hold onto a short put if the equities tank; we are in a once in a 60 year event that no one working in the city has seen.
 
Last edited:
It all depends on two 2 factors, 1) time remaining and 2)Volatility change on such a move.

If the spot moves from 8200 to 7700 say 3 days after you have sold the 7000 one month put, vol will go through the roof (7800 in the dow being the recent low), and in particular, puts will be bid to absolute riduclulas levels, teeny puts that were 10 -14 may well be 15-19, not so much with delta but with just general fear and people scrambling for puts as the spot has breached a big level.

In such situations, I will not advise having your stop at a futures level, as if it breaks beyond the recent low, it will be more than armageddon for ypou personally, it maybe bankrupt- if it breaches 7800, where will it stop? a 7000 put sold for a 100 points, will be worth 4-500 points if the dow trades 7200 in a week- it is an extraordinarily ballsy person that will be willing to hold ontop a a put if the equities tank; we are in a once in a 60 year event that no one working in the city has seen.
I understand that the current situation is exceptional (but also the premium received on option is extremely high).
But still in the above example I have placed a stop order for my naked put at the moment I entered my trade. It should be executed at some stage if the market of the mini dow is liquid enough. Or is there a risk that my stop will just not get filled?
 
A stop order when hit becomes a market order and you will be filled -- the problem: if you get stopped out in a "fast market", i.e. when that day's implied volatility has spiked and there is real fear in the market the bid - ask spread will be quite wide -- hence, you might get a horrid fill.

You could test the market selling SPX or SPY puts. They are traded on the CBOE (Chicago Board of Option Exchange) and both have average daily volume of 500,000 to 1,000,000 options with open interest of 900,000 to 1,000,000 plus -- huge liquidity. And their option chains are long and active. You might consider selling vertical put spreads (also, called bull put spreads and Condors) ... stops can be used on these, too.The short put of the spread is hedged with the long put and you'll be able to watch the behavior of the short put with a lot less volatity. Just a thought.
 
Last edited:
Top