A good chunk of my wife and I's retirement is in our respective company 401ks. Fortunately, they offer some level of self direction so we're not completely stuck with 6 mutual funds. Any recommendations on how to hedge retirement accounts effectively?
I'd like to maintain the hedge in this account, so shorting/futures, etc aren't allowed. I currently have permission for covered calls and I'm trying to add cash secured puts, long options, and spreads but we'll see if they allow it.
Any suggestions on some good insurance methods? Obviously I must accept some level of risk, but I'm trying to just avoid some catastrophic events at a reasonable price.
One idea was for longer term ratio back-spreads which cover a good chunk of the account (say SPY). The reasoning is that in a trending bull market, the backspread losses would be minimal. In a ranging market, I typically sell near term options, so that would help offset things. In the event of a big downside move, the backspread would provide a good level of protection.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks much,
I'd like to maintain the hedge in this account, so shorting/futures, etc aren't allowed. I currently have permission for covered calls and I'm trying to add cash secured puts, long options, and spreads but we'll see if they allow it.
Any suggestions on some good insurance methods? Obviously I must accept some level of risk, but I'm trying to just avoid some catastrophic events at a reasonable price.
One idea was for longer term ratio back-spreads which cover a good chunk of the account (say SPY). The reasoning is that in a trending bull market, the backspread losses would be minimal. In a ranging market, I typically sell near term options, so that would help offset things. In the event of a big downside move, the backspread would provide a good level of protection.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks much,