Quote from Neoxx:
In your experience, what have you found to be the most effective way of finding underpriced options?
How reliable is comparing current implied volatility to mean historical volatility?
Thanks,
Neoxx
Quote from Maverick74:
Why exactly are you trying to find undervalued call options?
Buying underpriced options gives you four advantages:
1) It shifts the probabilities in your favor. When an option's premium is equal to the fair value, no one has an advantage. But when you buy an option with a premium that is less than the fair value, you have a slight "house advantage", just like a casino.
2) It reduces time decay (because you are paying for less time value).
3) It limits your risk and reduces losses when you are wrong about the direction. Since the option is already underpriced, if there is an adverse price move, the option will lose less value than it would otherwise.
4) It increases your profits when you're right about the direction. As the option's premium moves back in line with the fair value, this helps your position.
Quote from Riskarb:
Quote an IV column based upon the midpoint of the bid/offer. Many off the shelf apps like OptionVue or Microhedge will do, or simply quote it in excel.
Use the atm combo vol as the vol for pricing vol skew and under/overpriced values.

Quote from Neoxx:
I realise the internet's not the most reliable source for information but I read this on www.thepitmaster.com
Hopefully I'll understand what this means after I've read Baird's book-![]()
Unless you know what the future volatility will be, it is impossible to find undervalued options. Options are only undervalued in hindsight, not foresight. Relative mispricing due to Vol skew really is quite small and not a viable strategy for the retail trader paying spreads & commissions.Quote from Neoxx:
In your experience, what have you found to be the most effective way of finding underpriced options?
============Quote from Neoxx:
I realise the internet's not the most reliable source for information but I read this on www.thepitmaster.com
Hopefully I'll understand what this means after I've read Baird's book-![]()
