Also, have you considered trading fewer contracts, and widening the spread to take better advantage of theta decay on the closer to money contracts? is 10 pts spread standard for you or do you change it up a bit, depending on IV and other things?
... have you considered trading fewer contracts, and widening the spread to take better advantage
Yes, that's what I do. For the /ES I usually set the legs 10 points apart vice trading more contracts. That works for me.
Best
a few questions about your strategy.
-why pick /es over spx, where there's more liquidity?
-how do you determine the % take profit or % loss in your trading plan? i personally trade more on the discretionary side. the chart usually tells you whether buyers or sellers are in control. yours seems more systematic. But as market conditions change, how do you modify your strategy and rules? If you have put credit spreads that are at 50% profit, but market is looking strong, would you close it anyway and follow your list of rules, or make a call to let them expire worthless?
- when you say risk a certain % of your account, do you mean max loss, or just the stop loss, and maybe some slippage?
- how important is put/call ratio compared to ATM skew? I feel like the skew at least lets you have some sense of the direction bias, while put/call ratio, you don't really know whether they're being bought or sold.
Well you gotta admit. They all look good on the charts. The pitchforks, the gann fans and the "Wavey crap" aka Elliott Waves. LOL Elliott waves is actually based on the Fibonacci sequence, another very elegant mathematical concept. They are all very elegant concepts but the problem with them is that they don't take into account the chaotic or random walk elements in trading. These are all elegant math concepts which are all very elegant in theory but the market isn't all theory. It's both very practical and dynamic and those concepts don't accommodate that so they are not reliable systems to be used for trading. You can use them as a guide to give you a rough idea of where the market could be going but you need to use other tools for confirmation for sure.
As I get older and the more I trade and study, the more I'm starting to unlearn all this random talk crap. Markets are definitely not random. At least not "random" in my definition. Completely random and total chaos would be a stock which fluctuates 7 sigmas a day for example. But as we all know this isn't true. Markets have a rhythm, an ebb and flow. We witness this "wave" movement daily. Thus, elliot wave was the first attempt at theorizing the ebb/flow movements of financial instruments into a trading method. Also remember, these market strategies (elliot wave, fibs, gann, harmonics, etc etc) were created by men. Each human has his own perception of reality, so of course no method will be the holy grail. You need to use elliot wave WITH other metrics of your choosing that matches your personality.
Second, even though the market behaviour does have some noticeable patterns but it is not 100% predictable. And it is not possible to always predict what is going to happen exactly at t+1 according to what is happening at t. And this is what the concept of "random walk" is talking about. You can be making profit for n number of times with the observed pattern but you never know one day you will make a loss with the same observed pattern. Elliott Waves uses mathematical concept of Fibonacci sequence to try to show where the market will possibly be going according to observed patterns of what happened in the past but the issue is did those patterns take into account of everything that could possibly happen? And that is assuming that the waves are unambiguous and without debate. Is that a wave 1 or is that wave a? Are we in wave 2 or is that wave b? It's hard to say it's someone else's perception of reality when it's not even clear what he is trying to illustrate. Spectastic
SPX is 100 multiplier. So say it is trading at 3700 then the contract is worth 370000. That is twice what the 3700 ES would trade for. SPX is european expiry so you can't be assigned early. ES is American style so if are itm, which you should never allow yourself to be you may be assigned. ES is 50 multiplier.
Both ES and SPX have mini or micro analogs. With SPX it is XSP with a 100 multiplier but the contract is 1/10 the SPX. So a 3700 SPX for XSP will be 370 (x 100 or 37000 contract price).
If interested in XSP and can appreciate the european style scheme then you could do 5 XSP to equal one ES.
ES has 1/10 counterpart, MES that is also American style if you wanted to goof around with that.
Work backwards. Determine what you would like to make weekly and go from there.
Doesn't matter why people are buying or selling. You will go crazy trying to figure that out. All that matters is how far out of the money you need to go and still make what you need.
Consider not going over .05 or -.05 delta. Go further out of the money and more contracts.
If I had $500k in my account I would just do SPX. It is not an efficient use of margin but the european style certainly has its advantages.
Also, if you want to do individual stocks make sure their implied vol is at least 2x SPX. Also don't do any stock that has a market cap less than $100B. Worst nightmare is to wake up and see a stock you sold a call on has been taken out with a 50% premium. $100B company is too big to be taken out like that. Actually $200B is even better
Also don't worry if the price is good or bad. Just let the delta value be your guide, I mean it is what it is, and consider only working with close in expiry's. 2 weeks maybe. But, the ideal expiry is just when the theta starts to really work and I don't know how to figure that out, just yet any way.