Muffhands, I missed where you stated your actual strategy:
Are you long or short?
Puts or calls?
How far out are you trading?
This whole discussion pivots on the answers to those questions.
Option strategies' individual bearing on probabilities of "success" depend not only on market movements (to which everyone has thus far responded) but on the timing of these market movements which everyone -- and you -- have thus far ignored.
Expectancy for any time-depreciating asset goes to market action and probabilities of that action, subject to the clock. My vote would be that 'the thing [you're] missing' is time.
Are you long or short?
Puts or calls?
How far out are you trading?
This whole discussion pivots on the answers to those questions.
Option strategies' individual bearing on probabilities of "success" depend not only on market movements (to which everyone has thus far responded) but on the timing of these market movements which everyone -- and you -- have thus far ignored.
Expectancy for any time-depreciating asset goes to market action and probabilities of that action, subject to the clock. My vote would be that 'the thing [you're] missing' is time.
you can test that with calculating the Hurst exponent and various other statistical tests. E.g. I recently found out that recently the SPY has a Hurst exponent of .48, where .5 is random.