It felt wrong, but I closed my vertical spread in silver because price reached X-ATR off a moving average. Silver reached about 10 ATR, a pretty rare event as far as shorter time frames go. I left more money on the table than I took. It is actually not that unusual for new trends in silver to perform this way.
While the risk environment was favorable when I closed the position, I was still uncertain how the correlated equities market was going to end up and I knew I’d be too busy at work to frequently check prices.
I could not offset some, say half, delta as a compromise, because my position was the equivalent of .19 delta with the micro silver contract representing .20 delta, while gamma was headed towards negative territory, meaning I could lose money if silver continued to rise. I could have offset some delta with another options position, without closing the original, long term structured position. However, due to spread costs, it was not a cheap option. As it turned out, it would have been a better option to what I actually did.
So I had a granularity problem that I could look at as costing me $600 in profits that is related to me not allocating more exposure to my ideas. There was substantial a cost to being too conservative with this trade idea.
Another issue with longer term ideas is, like it or not, shorter time frames are included and efficient trade management is not possible without accounting for those shorter time frames. In other words, I could have structured this trade idea much better from the beginning. It may be net beneficial to structure trades around my “Personal” probability curves, rather than GBM (Geometric brownian motion), or similar concepts, but that debate is for another day.
Silver may consolidate for a day or two, with resolution afterwards seemingly likely to the upside. I will probably reenter a bullish position next week on silver and will make appropriate adjustments versus my last trade. On the daily chart, using a reversion methodology, there seems to be plenty of upside left.
Will be taking a break from posting because my 80+ hour work weeks and personal obligations are competing for every free minute of my time.
While the risk environment was favorable when I closed the position, I was still uncertain how the correlated equities market was going to end up and I knew I’d be too busy at work to frequently check prices.
I could not offset some, say half, delta as a compromise, because my position was the equivalent of .19 delta with the micro silver contract representing .20 delta, while gamma was headed towards negative territory, meaning I could lose money if silver continued to rise. I could have offset some delta with another options position, without closing the original, long term structured position. However, due to spread costs, it was not a cheap option. As it turned out, it would have been a better option to what I actually did.
So I had a granularity problem that I could look at as costing me $600 in profits that is related to me not allocating more exposure to my ideas. There was substantial a cost to being too conservative with this trade idea.
Another issue with longer term ideas is, like it or not, shorter time frames are included and efficient trade management is not possible without accounting for those shorter time frames. In other words, I could have structured this trade idea much better from the beginning. It may be net beneficial to structure trades around my “Personal” probability curves, rather than GBM (Geometric brownian motion), or similar concepts, but that debate is for another day.
Silver may consolidate for a day or two, with resolution afterwards seemingly likely to the upside. I will probably reenter a bullish position next week on silver and will make appropriate adjustments versus my last trade. On the daily chart, using a reversion methodology, there seems to be plenty of upside left.
Will be taking a break from posting because my 80+ hour work weeks and personal obligations are competing for every free minute of my time.