How do you pick the strike to protect your long stock? Do you always go cheap and just buy the front month OTM put so you won't lose an arm and a leg on the "insurance" in case the long stock moves in your favor?
Quote from turkeyneck:
How do you pick the strike to protect your long stock? Do you always go cheap and just buy the front month OTM put so you won't lose an arm and a leg on the "insurance" in case the long stock moves in your favor?
Quote from jwcapital:
I read an interesting post about this. Look for OTM puts with the highest volume and open interest. These probably cost less than $1.00. These puts are typically more volatile than ATM or ITM, so more bang for the buck.
Quote from nazzdack:
1) Lower delta---yes
2) Greater gamma and vega----yes
3) When the market declines, the OTM-puts become super-charged.
Quote from riskfreetrading:
In addition (turkeyneck), why you do not just buy a call if you are long the stock and want to protect it with a put? It is more efficient from capital and commission point of views. Plus always hedge your call.
Put protection is like an insurance policy. You have to determine how much protection you want. The more the protection, the costlier the policy. The lower the protection, the higher the deductible.How do you pick the strike to protect your long stock? Do you always go cheap and just buy the front month OTM put so you won't lose an arm and a leg on the "insurance" in case the long stock moves in your favor?

I doubt that this has much relevance for someone who is looking to hedge long stock.I read an interesting post about this. Look for OTM puts with the highest volume and open interest. These probably cost less than $1.00. These puts are typically more volatile than ATM or ITM, so more bang for the buck.
The dividend is irrelevant. When all is said and done, the put protected stock holder who gets the dividend has the same result as the call buyer who collects interest on his principal.You don't get dividend with a long call. Or some "buy and hold" stock you don't want to sell for tax reasons.