Please consider this scenario:
Stock is at 20$. I short the 20 put (1 month to go) for 0.25 , hoping for a bullish move.
Stock goes up to 20.20 quickly, so assuming a -50 delta, the put goes to 0.15.
So I purchase the 19.50 put as a cheap insurance, for... let us say...0.05.
SO I have a bull put spread with max possible loss = .50 - 0.20 = 0.30 and max gain = 0.25 - 0.05 = 0.20.
If the underlying continues to move, should I look for a new trade altogether, or is there a way to adjust this put spread to improve its risk/reward characteristics? The 19.50 - 20 - 20.50 put butterfly comes to mind, but anything else?
Let us say for argument sake that I do get into this butterfly. Underlying continues to move past 20.50. Should I just look for a new trade, leaving the butterfly alone, or should I look to morph the butterfly into something else? What would that be?
Stock is at 20$. I short the 20 put (1 month to go) for 0.25 , hoping for a bullish move.
Stock goes up to 20.20 quickly, so assuming a -50 delta, the put goes to 0.15.
So I purchase the 19.50 put as a cheap insurance, for... let us say...0.05.
SO I have a bull put spread with max possible loss = .50 - 0.20 = 0.30 and max gain = 0.25 - 0.05 = 0.20.
If the underlying continues to move, should I look for a new trade altogether, or is there a way to adjust this put spread to improve its risk/reward characteristics? The 19.50 - 20 - 20.50 put butterfly comes to mind, but anything else?
Let us say for argument sake that I do get into this butterfly. Underlying continues to move past 20.50. Should I just look for a new trade, leaving the butterfly alone, or should I look to morph the butterfly into something else? What would that be?