Quote from Butterball:
No macro thinking, no fundamental reasoning. Probably there are dozens of very good fundamental reasons for either side of the trade. Why bother?
To me - just by means of anecdotal observation - many players are betting on one side of the boat thinking it's a no-risk 100% sure-fire bet to collect risk-free money. What if just hypothetically the 'real' odds are were only 85% or 90%? With the recent drop my risk is down to approx. half a percent with a potential payoff of a dozen or so percent. I love asymmetric setups like these.
This doesn't compute. There's nothing asymmetric (from a EURCHF short point of view) about it. If the floor fails, you'll have plenty of time to get in and short EURCHF (say at 1.19) on the way down to 0. On the other hand, you could wake up one morning to find the floor has been raised to 1.25 (actually, given the political difficulty of raising the floor, I believe the SNB will go big if they do it again and raise to 1.30 or 1.35). You're standing in front of a screaming freight train to pick up a couple of pips.
