20-Delta Short Strangles

Cafe con Leche, Jamon Iberica, Manchengo Queso, El Sol. Te deseo exito! Planeo visitar vistiar a menudo.
I had to use a translator, but yes, come and visit any time! We'll be on the southern coast somewhere near Malaga.
 
Fair enough question, but I'm a little puzzled by it: aren't MOST of us on a website like this out to make a lot of money? Is there a figure for "too much"? My retirement "fund" isn't 700k, my net worth is 700k. Slightly more than half of that is in the house, but our payoff is in the neighborhood of 70k, so barring this housing bubble collapsing before I can sell it and move, my net worth IS essentially my retirement fund. But I'll also have a 20-year Federal retirement, plus SS, so I don't even really NEED a retirement fund.

But to get down to brass tacks, I want to retire early. But to do that I'd need to replace much of my 126k salary. And we want to retire to Spain. That will happen in 4 years at 62, but if I could make it happen sooner, then so much the better. So when I paper-traded 10-delta short strangles and found them doubling in 13 weeks one time and on track to double in 15 weeks in a different campaign, I thought, "Hmmmm, this could be it. 50k invested, double it 'just' twice in a year, and there's most of my salary replaced."

And beyond that, I have 7 grown kids (5 natural, 2 adopted from foster care), and it would be cool if I could give them some kind of system to follow so maybe THEY could retire early, like real early. So those are the 2 main drivers behind looking for those kinds of returns this late in life.

There is a difference between attempting to make a lot of money and unrealistic expectations.

The reasoning goes like this: if you weren't capable of making good returns in the market earlier in life what makes you think you can do it now?

There are funds with the best teams, pedigree, research, connections, etc who struggle to post double digit returns, but you think at age 58 coming out of nowhere you can post returns that if compounded, in 10 years would make you a billionaire?

Not a dig at you, but basically why do you think you have the special sauce? More cynical people would say you don't, being your age and not a multi millionaire already.

4 years isn't that far away, the fact that you want to speed it up in the face of Fed retirement+SS tells me there's something in your life you are not satisfied with.
 
I'm stopping the experiment!

It good that you stopped the experiment. I was not sure your approach would work. There are many misconceptions regarding short strangles. I will give you some pointers from my many years of experience. First: don't trade high IV stocks in strangles. High IV gives you poor risk/reward. You need to focus on low IV stocks. You won't get rich quick but you won't blow up either. It is wrong to think that sell elevated premiums is a good idea. As a option writer you want to a stock/index that move very little day to day so you can make money from time decay. Second, short DTE options are directional bets due to the elevated gamma. Short strangles are non directional bets so you don't want to take on gamma risks. Third: short strangles profits come by slowly. If you want quick profits, strangles and iron condors are not for you: think time decay. There are may people like me who trade short strangles on a daily basis successfully. We don't gamble and we don't take on undue market risk. The blow up you hear about are from people who gambled and lost. They wanted to make the quick bucks so they overleverage and take on oversized risk. You can't do that with strangles or any short options trades. You need to have a well defined plan that has been tested over time.
 
I think I mentioned in this thread that I would revisit Iron Condors to see if I could get them to "work" for me like short strangles had. To that end, late yesterday and into this morning I loaded up a PM account with 8 of those, 10% trade size, 80% invested, just like here, and while it's still very early and this could just be a fluke, that account gained 2.4% just today.

Here's an article that might jump-start your research into iron condors: Iron Condors or Short Strangles. On indices, the author initially thought iron condors were better, but then switched to short strangles.
 
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Iron Condors make a lot more sense for retail to trade. Zero chance of blow-up or even being unfavorably forced out of a position if you size your max loss : capital properly. They will also have more realistic returns and help to understand vol space better, not misleadingly high ones like strangles over short periods of time; which are largely the amortized cost of huge, rare tail events that have been discussed.
 
some pointers from my many years of experience.
Not to get personal, what percentage returns would you consider realistic and from what percent of total capital at risk? I doubt very much anyone can make a living (in US or Spain) selling premium on low volatility stocks and/or indices.
 
Not to get personal, what percentage returns would you consider realistic and from what percent of total capital at risk? I doubt very much anyone can make a living (in US or Spain) selling premium on low volatility stocks and/or indices.

You can ;)
 
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