In his first book, Victor Sperandeo says that early in his career he traded the following strategy:
XYZ is at 25. VS believes it will go to 21 so he buys a 90-day straddle at 25 for $4. If the stock rises to 27 he'll sell short 100 shares. The max loss is therefore $200.
VS's idea is to maintain a 3:1 reward/risk ratio. If the stock goes to 21 at expiration, he'll make $600 ($600 on short stock sale, break-even on straddle). If it stays at 27/share he loses $200.
However, what if the stock never advances to $27 but meanders along near $25? Would anyone on this board comment on when to cut losses on the straddle? Also, when is a good idea to take profits?
Help is greatly appreciated. Thanks.
XYZ is at 25. VS believes it will go to 21 so he buys a 90-day straddle at 25 for $4. If the stock rises to 27 he'll sell short 100 shares. The max loss is therefore $200.
VS's idea is to maintain a 3:1 reward/risk ratio. If the stock goes to 21 at expiration, he'll make $600 ($600 on short stock sale, break-even on straddle). If it stays at 27/share he loses $200.
However, what if the stock never advances to $27 but meanders along near $25? Would anyone on this board comment on when to cut losses on the straddle? Also, when is a good idea to take profits?
Help is greatly appreciated. Thanks.