max amount

The short answer to your question is, don't be concerned about the liquidity of the option, only concern yourself with the liquidity of the stock. There is always an Arb there ready to do YOUR size on the other side of the trade as long as it can be Arb'd against the stock. Of course, the more options you buy or sell, the more you will cause them to move volatility against you (see: black-scholes option pricing model) and hence the option will become somewhat more expensive or cheaper (depending upon which side you are on). Nonetheless, you can always get as many options done as you need.
 
Thanks for all the help all..

The one major problem with my strategy is that it doesn't work on just 1 stock / currency / commoditiy. It is "out of the market" about 80% of the time, so it only works well if I have a portfolio of at least 30 (preferablly more like 100) different stocks/currencies/commodities/interest rates.

So my main concern is if I ever get to the level of trading large amounts, I'll have to drop off the entire Dow part of the strategy. And without the Dow stocks/options, the strategy will work ok since there are over 30 currencies, etc that are highly liquid. But due to losing 30 or so stocks to trade I'll have much less diversification.. with less diversification I'm forced to reduce the money at risk which in turn reduces return.

-Taric
 
Quote from trade-ya1:

The short answer to your question is, don't be concerned about the liquidity of the option, only concern yourself with the liquidity of the stock. There is always an Arb there ready to do YOUR size on the other side of the trade as long as it can be Arb'd against the stock. Of course, the more options you buy or sell, the more you will cause them to move volatility against you (see: black-scholes option pricing model) and hence the option will become somewhat more expensive or cheaper (depending upon which side you are on). Nonetheless, you can always get as many options done as you need.

You try to do that many contracts in an illiquid option the vol will explode against you.

Not somewhat more expensive ...
 
And im surprised Metoxx has taken time to answer....all i know is that im not trading that kind of size in options to even pounder such a question.

:D
 
Quote from ertrader1:

And im surprised Metoxx has taken time to answer....all i know is that im not trading that kind of size in options to even pounder such a question.

:D

Bored ...
 
Ok-- Neil-- I just saw your 2nd reply-- that makes total sense.

So I'm guessing I won't impact prices too badly as long as the number of shares I control is 3% of the daily dollar volume traded or less. (The 3% number is just a very rough guess on my part).

So in AT&T's case today, volume is about 4.5 million. With a stock price of $20, that means about $90 million was traded today. So... using my 3% number, I'm guessing I could trade $2.7 million in a trade without too much problem.

Or based on the delta-neutral market making in the option markets, I should be able to trade the equivalent.

Makes sense..

Thanks!

-Taric
 
=====
You try to do that many contracts in an illiquid option the vol will explode against you.

Not somewhat more expensive ...
=====

Hrm-- so even if I'm in a reasonable dollar amount with the underlying stock (again say 3% of the dollar trading volume), if I buy the option I'll still end up moving the market too much if it's volume is low?

One other question for you-- again thanks for all the replies, this is helping me out a lot-- on many of the options I see a bid/ask difference of over 10% or more (and these are even in-the-money options on Dow stocks). Is that typical?

Thanks,
-Taric
 
Quote from ptunic:

=====

One other question for you-- again thanks for all the replies, this is helping me out a lot-- on many of the options I see a bid/ask difference of over 10% or more (and these are even in-the-money options on Dow stocks). Is that typical?

Thanks,
-Taric

Typical, yes. Keep in mind that the more in the money the option is, the more it will act like the underlying stock itself, and generally the option markets will be wider than the market on the stock. I've traded on the floor of the CBOE, and depending on what's going on in the underlying it's not uncommon to have 5000-10000 lot trades go up. Keep in my that you're gonna have to pay up, or hit the bid, but it's possible.

Vega:D
 
And not to sound rude, but until you have a firm understanding of options trading -- specifically delta neutral and volatility trading, I wouldn't be that concerned with trading such huge size. Once you're able to get a firm grasp of option theory, pricing, risk management, position trading, and execution, you'll be able to answer a lot of your own questions. Just my two cents, and best of luck to ya.

Vega:D
 
Quote from ptunic:

Actually I posted something similar under another forum, but it is most related to options right now..

Basically how do I figure out what is the maximum amount of options I can buy without impacting the market more than say 0.1%?

For example, I'm looking at AT&T (symbol T)'s option. Let's assume (this would be nice!) my portfolio is $100 million USD and I want to risk no more than 2% in any one option trade on AT&T. That is $2 million worth of premiums.

So.. for today for example, let's say I want to buy the July 2004 Call at a strike price of 20 (in-the-money). That is symbol TGD.X.

Right now it has a quote price of 1.35. Since each contract is 100 shares, the price per contract would be $135 not including commissions. So with $2 million, I want want to buy 14,814 options.

I might be misreading Yahoo charts here-- but it shows volume at "8" and open interest at 14,784. So this might not work too well. I guessing volume of "8" on Yahoo charts means something more like 800 or 8,000 or something like that to make any sense. But just based on open interest, I would be buying more contracts than are currently open!! That can't be good..

So I have a few questions.. does the volume of 8 really mean only 8 contracts were traded? That doesn't seem to make sense to me, it is a bit too low.

But the real question is how can I determine what is the most number of contracts that I can trade on this day without impacting the price of the option too much (say 0.1%, or ideally 0.05%).

Thanks!
-Taric

+=========================

Taric;
[1] Actually that ''8'' on your ''T option '' sounds exactly right;
8 contracts total, just checked it twice & open interest 14k plus.
:cool:

[2] Vega & Metooxx had a good do more readING point on vol.

[3]Dont take it personaly, here some more vol reading ;
that ''T option'' isnt ITM now & bids are in .9/.95. depending.

===

I think ahead also but still read ''Big Trends'':D by mr Price Headly ;
scale in helps but IF one trades that size , might pay to let several market makers ''work '' that one over time .:D
 
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