How to create capital loss with options (or otherwise)

  • Thread starter Thread starter bpj
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You stated short Jan vs long Feb CL has no directional exposure. That is not true. You would be a bit short. Rolling that + Feb to +March would make you shorter.

How come I would be a bit short? If I go 10 contracts short Jan and 10 contracts long Feb isn't the net position 0?
 
@Wheezooo
Sorry to call you out - I thought you might have missed my question in post #21 - would be grateful if you could explain your reasoning
 
@Wheezooo
Sorry to call you out - I thought you might have missed my question in post #21 - would be grateful if you could explain your reasoning

I saw it. I wanted to see if you would invest time to figure it out for yourself.

But here's a clue. Backwardation and contango.
 
Well, I know about contango and backwardation but that is unpredictable. It can shift from one to the other any time - that is the risk involved with this strategy. Is there any way to reduce it?
 
Neither of Bum's strategies would fly in the US. In the first strategy, they are clearly offsetting positions under the straddle rules. The second strategy is more debatable, but at least in a portfolio margin account, the fifth test for presumed offsetting positions would apply for long SPY/short QQQ: "The aggregate margin requirement for the positions is lower than the sum of the margin requirements for each position if held separately."
If you don't use margins?
 
Well, I know about contango and backwardation but that is unpredictable. It can shift from one to the other any time - that is the risk involved with this strategy. Is there any way to reduce it?

Think about the curve like a diving board. The front of the curve (Where the diver jumps off) moves much more than the back of the diving board. Therefore even though you are notional neutral (short 1 contract, long 1 contract) the short leg (front of the diving board) will move more than the back leg.
 
Is it safer to execute this strategy using further-dated CL futures? They are much less liquid - that is another concern.
Do you have any other suggestions as to the choice of CL contracts and direction of each leg?
 
Is it safer to execute this strategy using further-dated CL futures? They are much less liquid - that is another concern.
Do you have any other suggestions as to the choice of CL contracts and direction of each leg?

Depends on your intent....

In either case futures trading revenue will be marked to market at the end of the year.

If you are asking from a trading standpoint then yes the volatility between serial months is more comparable on deferred contracts.

You will generally find more liquidity on the June and Dec contracts.

I can't speak to trading strategy, that's something you would need to research/test to determine if there is positive expectancy.
 
Again, in my tax jurisdiction futures will NOT be market to market at the end of the tax year.

Do you mean the potential for a big move in spread between the deferred contracts is smaller than in near months?
 
Do you mean the potential for a big move in spread between the deferred contracts is smaller than in near months?

Yes that is correct, for an energy product like CL there is more volatility near the front.
 
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