Quote from TskTsk:
I get the same % vola no matter what time period I use. I think your math is off. Such an arbitrage would be too good to be true now in 2012.
As for gamma scalping, it's the same as with all volatility trading. Long gamma means a slow bleed with occasional big profits, short gamma means slow profits with occasionally big losses. Personally I prefer the latter as I believe there is a systematic overestimation of implied volas in markets due to irrational fear/greed responses (psychology). Personal experiences seem to confirm this, I've been employing such a strategy for a long time now and so far have made decent profits. I also have other filters obviously, I don't just blindly sell vola.
Let me give you an example. Suppose stock x moves within a range for a month, everyday the close price range from 99 to 101, the volatiliy based on daily closed price is quite low. But in this period, the highest and lowest price may be 110 and 90. So the volatility based on minute price is much higher.
So when you do the gamma scalping, you will make much more profit if you hedge the delta every minute instead of do it daily. This is what I want to say.
Yes I totally agree that shorting gamma is a better strategy. And I had discovered that you can do it with vix futures. That is the simplest way that you have no delta risk at all.
