Could you please clarify what you mean by 'itm outright'? Are you referring to the vertical? If so then how much itm?Quote from asap:
there are some problems with the spread approach when applied to your strategy. first, you are not sure of when the price move will happen. with spreads, either you chose hi leverage bets in front month or low leverage bets in back month. since you'd like to have both (that is, hi leverage and wider time frame), then the spread strategy might be suboptimal. doing hi leverage front month spreads and rolling them is dangerous, because, you might end up with a full loss even with neutral price action or slight positive drift, while with the itm outright, you'd always, at least, break even. if you chose a back month spread instead, you wont get as much bang for the buck and, in addition, if the price moves aggressively in your favor you have a nasty cap to your profit potential and hi rolling costs.
all this is based on the assumption of expecting "home runs" (ie merger announcements), which statistically, could be described as bell curve outliers. in my opinion, the best way to capture these outliers in a risk conscious manner is through itm outright because you have some downside protection, while maintaining the full payoff potential.
conversely, if what you refer as "home runs" are just normal statistical results and thereby already priced in contracts, then you could most probably optimize your strategy using spreads. the sweet spot for these spreads would be front months with approx risk:reward ratio of 1 to 2. i can explain why in a later post. now i head to bed, as i am across the atlantic.
Thanks.
db