Quote from SAA:
Hi Mte,
You sure on that its a short and not a long Iron condor?
According to the bible of Options strategies (by Cohen) he states that its a long iron condor, BUT I have found some mistakes in his book with some other strategies.
Cheers
SAA
Quote from SAA:
Hi Mte,
You sure on that its a short and not a long Iron condor?
According to the bible of Options strategies (by Cohen) he states that its a long iron condor, BUT I have found some mistakes in his book with some other strategies.
Cheers
SAA

Quote from MTE:
A short iron condor is short the body and long the wings. The "short" comes from the fact that you are net short premium.
An equivalent position (synthetic) would be a long call condor, which uses only calls (buy 1 call, sell 2 higher strike calls, and buy 1 yet higher strike call). The same can be constructed using only puts. In this case, the "long" comes from the fact that you're net long premium.
Quote from cohenmichaela:
A lot of people would disagree. Do a search on long condor and check out the results. I'm not saying I know definitively that you're wrong but I've always thought it was short body and long wings (same as butterfly) for delta neutral short volatility spreads (long condor, long butterfly, etc...). Short would then imply long volatility...
Quote from SAA:
Richard,
Thanks for that.
I have both books on order! Just waiting for Santa to deliver those still.
My background is a very technical one, (Cisco Engineer) so I like to be 100% sure. In this case I'm still not sure.
Please correct here me folks if wrong.
Long Iron Condor = Bull put spread + Bear call Spread. Overall credit position.
Short Iron Condor = Bull Call Spread + Bear Put spread. Overall Debit position
Clarifications on this would be great.
Cheers
SAA
Quote from SAA:
Some of the strategies at face value seem risky (the Short Strangle, he calls it the neutral trade), to me BUT I'm sure he would not enter it if the probability of high success was not in his favour/side!
SAA [/B]
Quote from lindq:
Are you consistently profitable in trading equities? If not, then options are not for you. They will simply accelerate your losses, as will any leveraged derivative of equities.