I am fairly new to spread trading and very often I find myself avoiding stocks which have wide bid/ask spreads. What about just excercising the option and selling or buying the stock.
Quote from johnson232:
I am fairly new to spread trading and very often I find myself avoiding stocks which have wide bid/ask spreads. What about just excercising the option and selling or buying the stock.
Quote from MTE:
When you exercise you lose any remaining time value...
Quote from dmo:
Right. And you also lose any POTENTIAL time value - such as you might get if the underlying moves back toward the strike. So even if there is no time value remaining, it's still not obvious that you want to early exercise.
Quote from donnap:
If the option is ITM and there's no time value or as MTE put it - the time value is less than slippage - then you may consider early exercise to close. YOU would not want the underlying to move toward the strike in this case.
Quote from dmo:
I can see why that would seem to make no sense Don. But I meant what I said - if it were me I WOULD want the underlying to move toward the strike because at that point I would be delta-neutral against the underlying. If I were long 100 DITM puts with no time value, they would have a delta of -1.0 each, and I would undoubtedly by that point be long 100 futures. So if the futures moved back toward the strike and there was still some time left until expiration, my long options would pick up some premium (time value, gammas) and I would be a happy pappy.

