Well, like I mentioned, if, for a given expiry, 210 has the most open interest, it functions as some sort of S/R because that is where people must start covering their naked options.
I assumed this was a question about welfare, but perhaps I'm reading into it too much and you're making a broader theoretical question. Could you clarify the question a little more?
I understand that strike prices of high open interest should be important to the writers; that's where they start losing money. If XYZ is at 200 and I am short a call at 210, though, wouldn't I want to buy the underlying to cover in order to hedge a loss?
What is the theory behind 210 becoming...
I think a fair government is something that comes about naturally when a large body of people says,
"Hey! We have a lot of complicated issues that are too energy consuming and complicated for all of us to be able to manage by ourselves. Most of us have jobs and families and other things we'd...
I guess not! What are the commission costs for this trade? IB has it at a dollar both ways, let alone the spread. So you're paying thousands of dollars just for the trade itself. Can you afford to lose all of it?
Yes. Your math is correct, not accounting for trade costs.
But, why do this math manually? Does your broker's software not allow you to trade the spread as an aggregate unit?
Or are you trying to leg in and out?
Given that an interest rate is looming over the US and that Brexit uncertainties continue, I am still bearish until strong fundamental news comes out. Which won't happen until after Brexit actually occurs and the results are tallied.
Hah!
Interesting, although I feel like fast whips are more likely to revert, and I am more concerned about a slow, methodical price action against me. I suppose the differences are what make the market.
Like I said, I'm unversed in this information. It wasn't a cunning plan so much as curiosity.
There's so much hype about a .25 point move, and either way it shocks the markets.
So why not make the moves more constant and smaller? I'm just looking at it as a way to increase rates without it...