i'm talking about as it relates to delta exposure.. i.e., you receive a larger credit per delta when selling the 35D put versus the 35D call, even tho your delta exposure is the same.. but also, yes, buy-writes at the same strike as a short put..
also, use IWM july 16 current contracts as an example:
if we're just talking credit-per-delta risk, the 34D put marks @ $5.18 and the 34D call marks at $3.84.. that's $0.15 per delta for the put and $0.11 per delta for the call.. obviously, short the put and long the call, yah, risk-reversal..
you said same strike will yield the same cost basis, but that's not what i'm finding right now, at least not here..
$223 strike buy-write vs a $223 short put.. IWM @ $221.40, $223 short call marks at $6.58, cost basis @ $214.82.. $223 short put marks at $8.57, cost basis on assignment @ $214.25.. the short put reduces cost basis per the amount of skew.. small difference, obviously, but it's there..
the point i'm trying to make in this thread is that shorting puts where there is put skew is going to give a cost edge over buy-writes..
You stated earlier that the up/out CC was = a down/out short put and the board went nuts. That's the problem.