thanks for sharing this but not sure it had an edge over a simple short treasury futs position. Point is people often claim they trade the option at limited risk vs other assets. I dont understand why, I can play the delta in the same risk limited way than the option.
Trading skew and IV directly are entirely different and I agree there are strategies with edge, I trade some of them myself regularly.
Trading skew and IV directly are entirely different and I agree there are strategies with edge, I trade some of them myself regularly.
Quote from dmo:
Such setups don't come along very often but they do happen. The ones that work for me are when the normal skew in a contract is reversed and IV is historically cheap. The play is to buy ridiculously cheap, far out of the money, back-month options.
The best example I can give is May of '07, when all the world was wildly bullish on T-bonds. December '07 and March '08 OTM puts were absurdly cheap, and selling at the same IV as the ATMs. There was good reason to go short T-bonds, but buying those far OTM puts was a much better play than shorting the futures, which soon dropped from 112 to around 104.
IV played a dual role in that directional play:
1. The cheapness of the puts and flat downside skew was a huge clue that bullishness was excessive and a drop therefore imminent.
2. The cheapness of the puts provided a way to play it with limited risk and big upside potential.
