Files
ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/curated/text/2ac89f51bfa0d0aff15f6e535cb16a3d84ebdfe3cbdb1b49328a9e2859e87d85.txt

28 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters
This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
Chapter 39: Volatility Trading Techniques 823
FIGURE 39-3.
Stock chart of RMBS.
19. 000 17. 250 18. 875 20010410
30.000
22. 000
14. 000
' ' : :
! : : : ; 1 : : 1 r : ! : : : : ; : : : : : i l : l : 6. ooo
99 M il M :i J ii s b N b J F M il M :i J il s b N b J F h 1
What this method may be best used for is to complement the other methods
described previously, in order to give the volatility trader some perspective on how
volatile he can expect the underlying instrument to be; but it obviously has to be
taken only as a general guideline.
CHECK THE FUNDAMENTALS
Once these mispriced options have been found, it is always imperative to check the
news to see if there is some fundamental reason behind it. For example, if the options
are extremely cheap and one then checks the news stories and finds that the under­
lying stock has been the beneficiary of an all-cash tender offer, he would not buy
those options. The stock is not going to go anywhere, and in fact will disappear if the
deal goes through as planned.
Similarly, if the options appear to be very expensive, and one checks the news
and finds that the underlying has a product up for review before a governmental
agency (FDA, for example), then the options should not be sold because the stock
may be about to undergo a large gap move based on the outcome of FDA hearings.
There could be any number of similar corporate events that would make the options
very expensive. The seller of volatility should not try to intercede when such events
or rumors are occurring.