Bread & Butter Iron Condors

i've been thinking the better thing is to emulate the probability distro of your instrument.. if it has a super steep kurtosis with fat tails.. butterfly and wrangle it in such a way that it looks like the distro... ANY THOUGHTS ON THAT
 
Quote from swag:

How did she not trade September if she starts these IC's 80 days out? i.e. she would have initiated from July? Volatility in July didn't start climbing until the week of 7/25, so she just had perfect timing for the most volatile month of the year? Fishy. I think they just excluded that month from the stats so as not to scare people from doing IC's.


I also wonder what was Max Drawdown in August. :eek:

haha becoming a trader will make a skeptic of anyone! haha you always feel like their is a hole in everyone's story of how they made money.. especially when they are telling you how they made money..
 
Quote from hedgeman:

For you guys trading IC's in this market, consider that the VIX is near its lows and since IC's are neg vega, if we get some bad news somewhere, you're still going to get killed on that trade.

Credit spreads can be the end of your trading career. You don't have to look too far back to see just why and how quickly sentiment changes. Just something to think about. You don't need me tell you, just add volatility and time to your trade and see what your results could be.


Good points about the VIX, volatility and time.

This is why I've stopped doing ICs on individual stocks.
Do all my ICs on SPY now, because it's the least volatile vehicle I know of, which is also very liquid and pays OK credits.

I also won't trade a Credit Spread with more than a 2/1 Risk/Reward ratio. (i.e. Minimum Credit of .35 for a $1 Spread)
I don't like risking $95 to make $5!
You can be right 9 times in a row and lose it all back and then some on the 10th try. No thanks.
:)
 
Quote from cactiman:

After an IC is set up I'll let it do its thing until 30 days before Expiration.
This is when the Rapid Time Decay begins. (see attached graph)
If either leg goes In The Money after that, I'll close the leg out to avoid a Max Loss.

So with the November 150/151/130/129 SPY Iron Condors, SPY can go above 150 or below 130 between now and October 16th all it wants, I won't care.
But if SPY is at 150+ or 130- on or after October 17th (30 days before the November 16th Expiration Date) I'll close out either the top or bottom leg.

Also:
For each group of ICs I make sure the Total Max Loss is no more than 2% of my Equity.
So by closing out before Expiration if things go wrong, my losses are always less than 2% of Equity.

I find this approach loose enough to give the ICs some wiggle room, but strict enough to keep losses small in the end.
:)

So especifically right now you'd be getting +0.30 for both credit spreads, with a maximum risk of 0.70, that is in dollars basis 1 option each leg:

Max profit: + $30 (initial credit)
Max risk: - $70
?
 
@cdcaveman:
Thank you for the great material. I've not looked at ICs from this perspective.

@all:
One thing that the article did not mention was her position size relative to to her account size. Yes, she has 65K on the line but is it 100% or 1% of her account or anything in between?

Cactiman mentioned that he only risks 2% of his account equity per IC. If that's the case, even 100% annual gain on 2% is just 2% of the entire account. There are plenty of ways to make 2% a year. Why mess with options at all?

Another thing is delta numbers in the article. I always thought that delta is expressed as a number between 0 and 1. How do I interpret delta of 8 or -16? Is it 8% or 0.08?
 
Quote from rocky_raccoon:

Cactiman mentioned that he only risks 2% of his account equity per IC. If that's the case, even 100% annual gain on 2% is just 2% of the entire account. There are plenty of ways to make 2% a year. Why mess with options at all?
[/B]

Not sure on your math here.
That's just a Max Possible Loss for 1 trade.
Say, -$200 for a $10K account.
A pretty standard loss tolerance for most traders.
It means you must have a total loss 50 trades in a row to get wiped out.

But you're not limited to winning only that much per year.
I hope!
:)
 
Quote from Cereal:

So especifically right now you'd be getting +0.30 for both credit spreads, with a maximum risk of 0.70, that is in dollars basis 1 option each leg:

Max profit: + $30 (initial credit)
Max risk: - $70
?

The Upper Leg I opened yesterday gave me a credit of .15
Yesterday I could have opened the Lower Leg for .17
But if I wait for SPY to pull back I should get a larger credit for the Bull Put Spread (the Puts become more valuable when SPY goes down), which is why I prefer to Leg-In to Iron Condors.

Let's say in a month's time SPY falls to 135 and I get .22 for the Bull Put Spread.
Now we're at .37, less .06 commissions = net .31 credit for the entire IC.
.31 divided by the Max Loss of .63 = 49.21% gain over 3 months = 16.40% per month.
The Risk/Reward = .63/.31= 2.03

For single leg Credit Spreads on individual volatile stocks I only allow a 2/1 Risk/Reward ratio.
For the slower moving SPY and 2 legged Iron Condors I'll go up to a 3/1 Risk/ Reward ratio, especially when the $VIX is low.
:)
 
I as well hate how they always state the delta in different ways.... Another thing about this strategy i think about sometimes... Is what do you consider the position size... The first spread you put on, the first time you roll it goes up 150 percent.. For 80 percent of the credit.. The second time you roll its another 150 percent on top of that for 80 percent of that credit... And then the third roll your at 150 percent of that at. 80 percent of that... And then no more rolls... So don't think think the position size should be considered by the total cost of rolls extrapolated.... Say this... Start out with 1000 bucks up on margin.. Considering the width of both strikes... Boom you roll once your at 1500.. Roll twice your at 2250 third time your at 3375.... So basically your third roll is 3375 which is 3.37 times your first position for.. If you got a 4 on 30 return. 13 percent.. You would start out with a 130 dollar credit. And after three rolls have a. 66 percent credit.. Boy thats in it to win it on the last roll there.. 3375 for a 66 dollar credit.. Haha tell me if my math is wrong
Quote from rocky_raccoon:

@cdcaveman:
Thank you for the great material. I've not looked at ICs from this perspective.

@all:
One thing that the article did not mention was her position size relative to to her account size. Yes, she has 65K on the line but is it 100% or 1% of her account or anything in between?

Cactiman mentioned that he only risks 2% of his account equity per IC. If that's the case, even 100% annual gain on 2% is just 2% of the entire account. There are plenty of ways to make 2% a year. Why mess with options at all?

Another thing is delta numbers in the article. I always thought that delta is expressed as a number between 0 and 1. How do I interpret delta of 8 or -16? Is it 8% or 0.08?
 
Quote from cactiman:

Not sure on your math here.
That's just a Max Possible Loss for 1 trade.
Say, -$200 for a $10K account.
A pretty standard loss tolerance for most traders.
It means you must have a total loss 50 trades in a row to get wiped out.

But you're not limited to winning only that much per year.
I hope!
:)

I guess I misunderstood you. So, let's say you have 10K and open one IC with max risk of $210 and max profit of $90 (using .30/.70 numbers from your other example).
Some time later you want to open another IC with similar parameters.
Will you close your first position and then open a second one (same risk) or open a second one in addition to the first one (double the risk)?
If the latter, at what point will you stop opening new positions?
 
Quote from cdcaveman:

I as well hate how they always state the delta in different ways.... Another thing about this strategy i think about sometimes... Is what do you consider the position size... The first spread you put on, the first time you roll it goes up 150 percent.. For 80 percent of the credit.. The second time you roll its another 150 percent on top of that for 80 percent of that credit... And then the third roll your at 150 percent of that at. 80 percent of that... And then no more rolls... So don't think think the position size should be considered by the total cost of rolls extrapolated.... Say this... Start out with 1000 bucks up on margin.. Considering the width of both strikes... Boom you roll once your at 1500.. Roll twice your at 2250 third time your at 3375.... So basically your third roll is 3375 which is 3.37 times your first position for.. If you got a 4 on 30 return. 13 percent.. You would start out with a 130 dollar credit. And after three rolls have a. 66 percent credit.. Boy thats in it to win it on the last roll there.. 3375 for a 66 dollar credit.. Haha tell me if my math is wrong

Not sure about your math but 7.5:1 risk/reward does not seem very attractive.

Also, I don't feel easy about all these double-down rolls. It goes against "never average a loss" principle.

I heard about other adjustment procedures though:
1. Close the winning leg and move it closer to the current price of the UL. This way overall risk does not increase while the profit potential does.
2. Divide your maximum allocation for the strategy in tree parts. Establish a first IC now, another one a week later, and a third one 2 weeks later. All three ICs will be positioned around different strikes and may balance each others deltas more or less neutral.

There is one more thing about ICs. They are vega negative and thus work best when IV has just peaked and about to fall down. Hence, I view them as a special occasion trade (IV spike) and not as a "bread & butter" strategy.
 
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