can you be more specific?
When the neophyte enters the option arena its quickly apparent this industry has a fascination with the iron condor. Why is this? You see a plethora of info on condors, yet no where near as much info on the fly? Why?
People might be disillusioned on thinking the condor is a "safer wager" than the fly. Your margin of error is larger, yet this comes with its own R/R.
I think its important not to look at option spread trades via the terminal distribution. A trader should always take a percentage of the R:R and manage early. IMO I'd rather buy an ATM weekly fly in $AAPL 10-wingwidth and manage at 25% max profit, than selling a condor OTM.
Your R:R is much better, with the ATM fly you are short the guts (selling peak gamma) unlike an OTM condor.
Also maybe someone can offer some advice, but in my experience I don't see the point in trading fly spreads >30DTE but even 30 days is too much. This spread is more geared for weekly expirations. Since the fly is "numb" to the greeks across the board, things start accelerating the last few days, thus its crucial to manage the fly before hand.


How do you decide position sizing for unlimited risk structures like 1x3’s?
Also what annual avg returns on net liq do you think are a reasonable expectation trading skew dynamics and trying to sell vol near a local max in single names?
Seems like returns are hard to come by in SN unless I get the delta lean right or there is a rare dislocation. My PnL on net short gamma seems to largely level out for me after enough trades from the inevitable outlier moves that occur. In calmer markets I am starting to wonder if the short vol beta is even worth chasing for retail.
Lastly what expirations do you think have the most edge? Is the front few weeks usually more attractive or do you trade several months back commonly?
Thanks for posting here about options, you are one of the guys that comes across as knowing your stuff.
What Option Chain column headings / settings build the picture that alerts you to an outlier?
Would you consider posting a screenshot of an outlier occurance in action?
Also maybe someone can offer some advice, but in my experience I don't see the point in trading fly spreads >30DTE but even 30 days is too much. This spread is more geared for weekly expirations. Since the fly is "numb" to the greeks across the board, things start accelerating the last few days, thus its crucial to manage the fly before hand.
Let me add a few more comments:
1. I am not a fan of @destriero, that was why he blocked me. But I have to give the devil his due. He is the real deal.
2. Knowing his trades were real and they were profitable gave me confidence to finding my own.
3. Butterfly, like selling options, in itself is not an edge. The expected profit of any butterfly is zero. I ran fly analysis using BSM and found the expected profit for any setup to be around zero.
4. But like card counting in blackjack, there are some situations where the expected profits are positive.
5. I finally understand the relationships between fly body, location, expiration, volatility, underlying behavior and exit. I will know if it works after I accumulate a statistically significant sample size (~50-100) in real trades but so far I am happy.
Happy holiday and stay safe.
ICs are slow-moving, which avoids panicking people new to trading.
Dude, you're such an ignorant old fart - the right way is to YOLO everything on a single name/strike! It's like you don't know what options are for or something...You'll never earn a double in short gamma shorting wings. It's impossible. Can you hit doubles, triples, etc. in long natural flies and other verts? Sure, but they need to be OTM at inception. Neutral to long gamma trading short gamma as spot trades ITM.