Files
ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/relevant/text/aa9f51c7a8f81efe9ddc2b2dfb89e41674690e5e962e92fbcc816122b7c6f522.txt

36 lines
2.3 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.
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
Accepting Exposure 215
$5.50 does not come along very often, so you should take advantage of it
when you see it.
Of course, the absolute value of premium you will receive by writing
(jargon that means selling an option) a short-term put is less than the ab-
solute value of the premium you will receive by writing a long-term one.
3
As such, an investor must balance the effective buy price of the stock (the
strike price of the option less the amount of premium to be received) in
which he or she is investing in the short-put strategy with the percentage
return he or she will receive if the put expires OTM.
I will talk more about effective buy price in the next section, but keep
in mind that we would like to generate the highest percentage return pos-
sible and that this usually means choosing shorter-tenor options.
Strike Price Selection
In general, the best policy is to sell options at as close to the 50-delta [at-
the-money (ATM)] mark as one can because that is where time value for
any option is at its absolute maximum. Our expectation is that the options
time value will be worthless at expiration, and if that is indeed the case,
we will be selling time value at its maximum and “closing” our time value
position at zero—its minimum. In this way, we are obeying (in reverse
order) the old investing maxim “Buy low, sell high. ” Selling ATM puts
means that our effective buy price will be the strike price at which we sold
less the amount of the premium we received. It goes without saying that
an intelligent investor would not agree to accept the downside exposure
to a stock if he or she were not prepared to buy the stock at the effective
buy price.
Some people want to sell OTM puts, thereby making the effective buy
price much lower than the present market price. This is an understandable
impulse, but simply attempting to minimize the effective buy price means
that you must ignore the other element of a successful short put strategy:
maximizing the return generated. There are times when you might like to
sell puts on a company but only at a lower strike price. Rather than accept-
ing a lower return for accepting that risk, I find that the best strategy is
simply to wait awhile until the markets make a hiccup and knock down the
price of the stock to your desired strike price.