Lets look at the 323 -310 1x 4 spread..
breakeven on the downside is 310 - 13/4
Lets just say you break even at 307 (which is only 5% down),and then you are naked short 3 puts- whatever hedges you got off...
the 310's have Vega of apx .17 at 15 vol..If you believe the market will trade at 10 vol,theoretically you should be able to capture 5 vol handles which would be 5 x .17=.85.
Im rounding up the vol to 10% on the 323 strike
Keep in mind you are selling gamma at very low levels and your total edge for each 1x4 spread is 0.85...
With that said.if you look at the 1/8 323 -310 1x4,if the market is unchanged and you never had to hedge,the 1x4 widens out to apx 1 dollar...
Is it safe to assume once you capture your initial theoretical edge,you would close the position,or would you keep on delta hedging as the 323's are trading at 8 vol and the 310's are trading at 15 vol?? The "edge' has actually gone up,with less time till expiration..hmmmmm,tasty
Heres the bottom line and this is what I encountered when I was the head trader of equity derivatives at a major investment bank.Its a question of when and not if before you encounter a large down gap down in the market.You wont get your hedges off and vol will explode in your face..You will give up most of your year in one to two days,you wont double down while you should and the pain will be brutal...keep in mind,its only a 4% gap down to get you to your max gamma..
I am a really fast defensive trader,and I got whacked on more than one occasion.It will happen to you...
Either you trade small enough where you dont give a shit if you "own" the short puts,or trade big and buy some cheap wings,even though you give up edge...
Sooner or later,selling 96% spot wings at 15 vol will get you..
Go big,and you are going home..
Thank you all.
This might be true, but spreads don't use too much margin so its mainly the surplus naked puts at ~15% margin that would be the issue. An example as of today would be for Jan 17th expiry, buying 1 $323 put at 10% vol and selling 4 $305 puts at 17% vol. Delta is close to 0 and the spread costs is also close to $0. I am under the impression that since you are selling at such a higher IV, that if you did this trade a million times(assuming there is close to normal distribution of returns), its a near mathematical certainty you would make money.
It seems like the IV would be representative of the other greeks, no? (and vice verse) Maybe said another way... If a stock has a realized vol of 10% and you are consistently selling with an IV of 15%, you make money in the long run, without considering any of the other greeks.
And wouldn't gamma only rise on lower IV if you are ATM? OTM options should see there gamma decrease.
Again, thanks for all the help.