Long Calls/Puts vs. Spreads (Long on the Wings)

Quote from dmo:


But if you start off short the middle and long the wings at a ratio that makes you gamma, vega and theta neutral, then if the underlying doesn't move, you get shorter and shorter premium (make more and more money) every day. If the futures DO move, you get long premium, which is usually just what you want. So this position has you short premium if the underlying doesn't move, and long premium if the underlying does move. It has you short premium if IV goes down, and long premium if IV goes up. These are exactly the characteristics you want in an option position. It is a very, very comfortable position to have. But comfort comes at a price. That's why those wings are expensive.

Is your gamma, vega and theta neutral position giving you a delta risk? I had built similar position in the past, and it survived the vega risk very well. However, it was very difficult for me to close the position because of a higher bid-ask spread that usually comes with a higher volatility. What is a better way to close this type of multilegged position to reduce the slippage. To close the whole position, i ended up with a small loss even my calculator showed i had a decent gain. :(
 
Hi Dmo,

I didn't see your post before. My 2 cents.

Quote from dmo:

A frequent question I get is "What is the correct interest rate to use." The answer is simple - YOUR interest rate. If you're using money you borrowed from a loan shark at 140% annual interest, then use that! If you're using money you'd otherwise put in T-bills at 2%, then 2% is the right rate to use.

I didn't know that you were a Louie the Shark's friend as well (with a discounted rate though) :p .

Be carefull with interest rates you're using. Option models are based on the assumption that, you're able to borrow and lend money using the same interest rate (even for banks it's not true).
That's one of the biggest error people make. Hence, if you borrow money with a 140% interest rate it's not sure you would lend it at the same level.
This leads banks to calculate option prices based on simulations like monte carlo and not on closed form ones, 'cause it's easier to take account of transactions costs and interest rates. But one needs a large number of simulations, that why computers run all nights long.

The second problem with option models is that it's based on the assumption that underlying asset expectation is risk free interest rate trend. Which one would you chose ?

The third problem is that different interest rates lead to different implied volatilities for the same market price. Which one will give you a correct information about volatility ? You can't have different expected standard deviations for the same price at the same time. It will be hard to rely it with a global market sentiment.



If you want to actually supply a volatility estimate, then yes, Hoadley gives you tools such as GARCH that permit you to calculate a volatility from the actual market movement over a given period of time. That's not how I do it though - like most option traders I use implied volatilities.

Garch is just a tool to forecast volatility mean reverting process. It won't provide you a solution, just an idea. It's an old model and not a very accurate one. But it's well known.

...
 
Quote from MasterAtWork:
Be carefull with interest rates you're using. Option models are based on the assumption that, you're able to borrow and lend money using the same interest rate (even for banks it's not true).


Are option models based on that assumption, or is that just a common misconception? I would say that if a lender uses his own rate, and a borrower uses his own rate, then everybody gets the right price and the model works as intended. Yes, that does result in a different "fair price" perhaps for the buyer and the seller, but nothing wrong with that.


The third problem is that different interest rates lead to different implied volatilities for the same market price. Which one will give you a correct information about volatility ? You can't have different expected standard deviations for the same price at the same time.


Aren't you playing devil's advocate here MAW? You and I have agreed in the past that the implied volatility doesn't really imply much about actual volatility - that it's better thought of as the "adjusted price" of an option.

As for GARCH - I probably should have said that Hoadley provides tools that allow you to calculate volatility over a past period of time, using closing prices, high-low prices, or high-low-close prices. Admittedly that doesn't tell you where volatility is going, but it tells you where it's been.

And if you look in another thread maw - I think the straddles thread - you will be happy to see that I have quoted from "the bible." It seems that the bible's author, Espen Haug, has come down on both sides of the issue of how much option pricing models are used - claiming as co-author of one article that they are entirely unused, and claiming in his book that they are the most-used mathematical models the world has ever seen. Like the author of that other Bible, Haug works in mysterious ways!
 
Quote from dmo:


Are option models based on that assumption, or is that just a common misconception? I would say that if a lender uses his own rate, and a borrower uses his own rate, then everybody gets the right price and the model works as intended. Yes, that does result in a different "fair price" perhaps for the buyer and the seller, but nothing wrong with that.


Black and Scholes framework (and broadly all continuous models) is based on that assumption. No tax, no transaction cost, steady volatility, steady interest rate, brownian motion followed by the underlying, continuous hedging possibilities...
So everybody may get their own right prices, but won't be able to compare datas based on.



Aren't you playing devil's advocate here MAW? You and I have agreed in the past that the implied volatility doesn't really imply much about actual volatility - that it's better thought of as the "adjusted price" of an option.


Yes, I'm. Please forgive me. Dave, that was just to show that one can't that way take a look at say Vix for example, and says "Guys volty is around 60%". 'Cause if you price you implied volty with 140% as interest rate, I'm sure current outcome would change.




And if you look in another thread maw - I think the straddles thread - you will be happy to see that I have quoted from "the bible." It seems that the bible's author, Espen Haug, has come down on both sides of the issue of how much option pricing models are used - claiming as co-author of one article that they are entirely unused, and claiming in his book that they are the most-used mathematical models the world has ever seen. Like the author of that other Bible, Haug works in mysterious ways!


No, in fact I think you better take another look at their article, if you were talking about Haug's and Taleb's one. :)
They state that models are unused because they are built on the assumption that options are priced by a self financing continuous delta hedging strategy. As a matter of fact, no market maker will take that assumption as serious as it was stated, because none will hedge his book continuously (there are transaction costs, week ends...). They hedge options with options, and THEN will hedge the residual part of their book on the underlying. Especially for exotic options, static hedges are broadly used insteed of continuous delta hedging.
So, even if people believe or seem to use BS framework, they actually don't.
 
Quote from MasterAtWork:

So, even if people believe or seem to use BS framework, they actually don't.


All right, well, Taleb and Haug are Ph.D.'s and I'm not so if they tell me I only think I've been using these models extensively for the past 25 years and that I really wasn't - who am I to argue?

To me, they're just playing games with language - and I fail to see the point. I can play that game too. I can define "using a hammer" as driving nails under 1 inch long. By that definition, if you're using a hammer to drive nails 2 inches long, you're not really using a hammer, even if you think you are. I could even come up with a historical reason to justify my definition. Maybe I could show that when hammers were invented, nails never exceeded 1 inch in length. So all the 2-inch-nail-driving people today who think they are using hammers are mistaken, because the inventor of the hammer never knew hammers could be used that way.

I could do that, but why? What's the point? Unless of course I'm in academia and have to "publish or perish." In that case I might have an incentive to play such silly intellectual games.

That's what Taleb and Haug do in their article. They create a ridiculously narrow definition of what it means to "use" an option pricing model and then show that - according to their artificially restrictive definition - nobody actually "uses" pricing models. So even if I use option pricing models a hundred times a day to make critical option trading decisions, by their definition I'm not "actually using" a pricing model.

But whatever Haug's definition of "use" is, I still wonder how he reconciles that nobody actually "uses" these models in his paper, but that more people "use" these models than any other mathematical tool according to his book.
 
Quote from dmo:

All right, well, Taleb and Haug are Ph.D.'s and I'm not so if they tell me I only think I've been using these models extensively for the past 25 years and that I really wasn't - who am I to argue?
Dave, please, I never talk about who is Ph.D and who is not. The fact that people have been using a model for a long time doesn't prove it was right (remember our discussion about " a more prononced" skew after 1987). The point is that your option price is built on the assumption that you will continuously delta hedge your position is simply impossible. Hence, what you're able to extracted from a pricing model like BS is just an idea, a more or less accurate idea.

To me, they're just playing games with language - and I fail to see the point. I can play that game too. I can define "using a hammer" as driving nails under 1 inch long. By that definition, if you're using a hammer to drive nails 2 inches long, you're not really using a hammer, even if you think you are. I could even come up with a historical reason to justify my definition. Maybe I could show that when hammers were invented, nails never exceeded 1 inch in length. So all the 2-inch-nail-driving people today who think they are using hammers are mistaken, because the inventor of the hammer never knew hammers could be used that way.

Now imagine your example with the assumption that a nail is a nail, no matter how long it is, but that your using a hammer AS a nail. Sure Dave you will finally drill something using a hammer as a nail. It will work, it's okay. Now are you sure you can state that a hammer is just a nail ? If you don't you will have to argue with people that would tell you you're wrong. But you could. Is it right for everybody? Imagine you meet a guy who tells you that he always swaps hammer for nail, and use hammer as nail for the last 25 years. Would you tell him straightforward he may be wrong? He would answer that the work was done.

I could do that, but why? What's the point? Unless of course I'm in academia and have to "publish or perish." In that case I might have an incentive to play such silly intellectual games.

You may be right with that, but it doesn't make the model to be right that way.


That's what Taleb and Haug do in their article. They create a ridiculously narrow definition of what it means to "use" an option pricing model and then show that - according to their artificially restrictive definition - nobody actually "uses" pricing models. So even if I use option pricing models a hundred times a day to make critical option trading decisions, by their definition I'm not "actually using" a pricing model.

No, I disagree. If a model is wrong the way you're using it, how can you expect to follow outcomes it would provide ? The model we are using made an assumption that you can price an option like a REPLICATION of a CONTINUOUSLY delta hedging strategy.
Hence, if you can't continuously delta hedge, you can replicate the payoff an option and then derive the price.
Please Dave, would you tell me how you continuously delta hedge a short put or a short call today (with bumpy market), without another option ? Show me how to build a strategy that offsets transaction costs while continuously hedged on the underlying? Make an example with an out of the money naked put right now.
 
Dmo,

The fact that a model is wrong doesn't prevent people to still use it. Basically, if you're using something like Black-Sholes or Cox Ross Rubinstein framework, your assumption is that volatility is a constant.
How can we imagine to calculate Vega, that is the first derivative an option price with respect to volatility, ie volatility variation rate, that way ? Variation rate of something that is a constant, is always....zero.

Dave, for sure volatility is not constant, and for an option trader that's what make money. But it's irrelevant with model framework. why don't we talk about constant interest rate that is implied in option pricing? As for Vega, the same for Rhô. There is no such a thing than a steady volatility and a steady interest rate in real life.
Options were traded before option pricing models were built, with heuristic rules and tricks. Models are tools and nothing more.
 
I've re-read the article by Taleb and Haug, and I still see only intellectual masturbation.

Since I see nothing but specious arguments and distortion in the article from start to finish, it's hard to know where to begin explaining why. But here's a smattering.

- One major criticism is that the BS model is derived from a "thought experiment" involving dynamic hedging. Dynamic hedging is impossible in reality. Therefore the entire model is built on a fallacy and no one can possibly use it as its authors conceived it.

Well, I can think of another Nobel prizewinner who was famous for his thought experiments - Albert Einstein. His involved such absurdities as people running at the speed of light. From these "silly" thought experiments Einstein had some of the deepest insights anyone's ever had, which have found wide practical application in astronomy, warfare, and others. Would you say that an astronomer calculating how much a planet bends light is not "really using" Einstein's work because he cannot run at the speed of light?

By the same token, the insights arrived at through the thought experiment using dynamic hedging have found wide application among option and derivative traders, even though the thought experiment that produced the insights cannot be replicated in the real world.

- Another criticism is that the existence of put-call parity makes the BS formula unnecessary. Even before BS, "Based on simple arbitrage principles [option traders] were able to hedge options more robustly than with Black-Scholes-Merton."

That works great for pricing the put if you already know the price of the call at the same strike, and vice versa. But what if you're dealing with illiquid options and don't have a price for either the put or the call? You'll need a pricing model.

- I guess my favorite criticism is that we don't "really use" the model, even if we think we're using it.

Doesn't this remind you of Bill Clinton's "It depends on what the definition of 'is' is." If this is the intellectual level of Taleb's case, then why even bother to discuss it?

On a personal level, I guess I find the whole article offensive because I first stepped into an option pit in 1984 with a grand total of $15,000 in my account. I've managed to increase it since then, but would not have been able to do so without the BS and Whaley pricing models. I must have made hundreds of thousands of markets in my life, risking lots of money each time. I am the furthest thing from a seat-of-the-pants option trader you can imagine, so every time I made a market, I relied totally on a pricing model. The models have not let me down.

When I was on the floor I would take the opposite position of whatever the public was doing. As a result, my positions grew randomly into an incomprehensible mish-mash of 5,000 to 6,000 long and short options at every strike and in every month. I was able to manage that incredible jumble with almost surgical precision using the BS and Whaley models. The model has worked. The model bought me the house I live in. The model has provided me with a living for 25 years. So if I "never really used it," okay, sure, whatever.
 
Quote from dmo:



- One major criticism is that the BS model is derived from a "thought experiment" involving dynamic hedging. Dynamic hedging is impossible in reality. Therefore the entire model is built on a fallacy and no one can possibly use it as its authors conceived it.

Well, I can think of another Nobel prizewinner who was famous for his thought experiments - Albert Einstein. His involved such absurdities as people running at the speed of light. From these "silly" thought experiments Einstein had some of the deepest insights anyone's ever had, which have found wide practical application in astronomy, warfare, and others. Would you say that an astronomer calculating how much a planet bends light is not "really using" Einstein's work because he cannot run at the speed of light?


You make a mistake Dave. Your example, to be the same as for option modeling, would have to be "Would you say that an astronomer calculating how much a planet bends WATER FALL is not "really using" Einstein's work because IT cannot run at the speed of light? I will say YES, newtonian's is fair enough to do that work.

With the same idea as in option modeling, what is important with Einstein's work, that is what every people knew as a given were wiped out. Every people, even "great old scientists", who basically knew things because they WERE GREAT old scientists, were proved to be wrong. Like old market makers in fact.

You know some things about relativity, so we go on.
Basically for the Newtonian mechanic, if you're running with a speed of S1=1 mph in a train, and that train is running with a speed of S2=2 mph, then vis a vis people out there, you're running with a speed of S3=S1+S2=1+2=3 mph. That's what every people would tell you. Before Einstein.
After Einstein, one needed to fit the formulae. In fact, in real life, S3=(S1+S2)/(1+(S1*S2/ square of light celerity)) AND NOT S3=S1+S2 WHAT EVERY PEOPLE CAN JUST SEE.

And you know Dmo, I'm sure in 1920's if you came to tell a great physic professor that speeds can't be just added, he would slap your face. You know why? 'Cause he made a living teaching that speeds can be just added.


By the same token, the insights arrived at through the thought experiment using dynamic hedging have found wide application among option and derivative traders, even though the thought experiment that produced the insights cannot be replicated in the real world.

Maybe Dave, but for a barrier option, try to dynamically hedge it.

- Another criticism is that the existence of put-call parity makes the BS formula unnecessary. Even before BS, "Based on simple arbitrage principles [option traders] were able to hedge options more robustly than with Black-Scholes-Merton."

That works great for pricing the put if you already know the price of the call at the same strike, and vice versa. But what if you're dealing with illiquid options and don't have a price for either the put or the call? You'll need a pricing model.


Yes, but a good one. People trade options "slightly" before 1973. How could they do that before without dynamically hedging? So, they were wrong, and never made money?
The price of a call or a put without a market is always a bet. If you have no put or no call, that is expectation that you are taking account for price modelling. Take a look at Natenberg for that work, I know you got the book. There is no need of a dynamically delta hedging strategy.
BTW, BS option price is reached for continuous movements. Continuous delta hedging leads to infinite delta hedges and infinite delta hedges leads to infinite transaction costs. That why people broadly hedge options with options. C'mon Dmo.

The best of all, BS model values are wrong, that's why you get a skew.

Please Dmo, replace this article with the context. Both claim that Black and Scholes only steal an 1900's option model, Bachelier's, and never thank Ed Thorp to be the one who derives the actual form. They were happy then to accept the one million dollar for the Nobelprize's formulae.
Take a look at Bachelier's formulae (1900), I'm sure you will change you mind. You then would take another look at Nelson (1904), Sprenkle(1964), Boness(1964), Samuelson(1965)...well before Black and Scholes and every prices are near, sometimes the same as the Black and Scholes ones. No one made a assumption like continuous dynamic hedging.
 
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