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Otapter 34: Futures and Futures Options 683
This profit table shows that selling the August 625 call at 19 and buying the
August 625 put at 31 is equivalent to - that is, it has the same profit potential as -
selling the August future at 613. So, if one buys the put and sells the call, he will
effectively have sold his future at 613 and taken his loss.
His resultant position after buying the put and selling the call would be a con­
version (long futures, long put, and short call). The margin required for a conversion
or reversal is zero in the futures market. The margin rules recognize the riskless
nature of such a strategy. Thus, any excess money that he has after paying for the
unrealized loss in the futures will be freed up for new trades.
The futures trader does not have to completely hedge off his position ifhe does
not want to. He might decide to just buy a put to limit the downside risk.
Unfortunately, to do so after the futures are already locked limit down may be too lit­
tle, too late. There are many kinds of partial hedges that he could establish - buy
some puts, sell some calls, utilize different strikes, etc.
The same or similar strategies could be used by a naked option seller who can­
not hedge his position because it is up the limit. He could also utilize options that are
still in free trading to create a synthetic futures position.
Futures options generally have enough out-of-the-money striking prices listed
that some of them will still be free trading, even if the futures are up or down the
limit. This fact is a boon to anyone who has a losing position that has moved the daily
trading limit. Knowing how to use just this one option trading strategy should be a
worthwhile benefit to many futures traders.
COMMONPLACE MISPRICING STRATEGIES
Futures options are sometimes prone to severe mispricing. Of course, any product's
options may be subject to mispricing from time to time. However, it seems to appear
in futures options more often than it does in stock options. The following discussion
of strategies concentrates on a specific pattern of futures options mispricing that
occurs with relative frequency. It generally m{inifests itself in that out-of-the-money
puts are too cheap, and out-of-the-money calls are too expensive. The proper term
for this phenomenon is "volatility skewing" and it is discussed further in Chapter 36
on advanced concepts. In this chapter, we concentrate on how to spot it and how to
attempt to profit from it.
Occasionally, stock options exhibit this trait to a certain extent. Generally, it
occurs in stocks when speculators have it in their minds that a stock is going to expe­
rience a sudden, substantial rise in price. They then bid up the out-of-the-money
calls, particularly the near-term ones, as they attempt to capitalize on their bullish
expectations. When takeover rumors abound, stock options display this mispricing