Did you seriously sell a leap credit spread for .21?
Yup.

Yup.


Quote from Maverick74:
And when my put expires worthless, they have me recorded as a net loser. The problem is I'm actually a huge net winner. If I bought stock at 400 and bought the 390 puts for 10 pts then I'm really long the synthetic calls at the 390 strike. And if AAPL goes to 450, I'm a huge net winner as I can now sell those calls for 60 pts that I bought for 20. Yet according to them, I'm just another stupid option buyer who lost money.
Quote from Maverick74:
Furthermore, most these articles don't even address the synthetic nature of options. That is, that a large majority of long put holders are really long synthetic calls. For example, say I'm long shares of AAPL and I buy puts to hedge my stock position because I don't want to sell my shares. These academics have me down as a long put buyer. And when my put expires worthless, they have me recorded as a net loser. The problem is I'm actually a huge net winner. If I bought stock at 400 and bought the 390 puts for 10 pts then I'm really long the synthetic calls at the 390 strike. And if AAPL goes to 450, I'm a huge net winner as I can now sell those calls for 60 pts that I bought for 20. Yet according to them, I'm just another stupid option buyer who lost money.
Quote from Maverick74:
Did you seriously sell a leap credit spread for .21?
Quote from oldnemesis:
By doing this I have removed the possibility that my loss may go to the $229 total liability.
This is getting out of the way of the steam roller because it is getting a little too close. This is what makes picking up nickels in front of the steam roller a viable strategy.
Quote from luckyputanski:
Also, what about the fact that realized vol is usually lower than implied? There was some research about it, but can be easily calculated. Of course, during crashes selling vol losses money, but it can quickly recover:
http://media.pimco.com/Documents/Vi...eptember 2012.pdf738bfA&bvm=bv.49641647,d.ZG4
Quote from comintel:
Realized vol may be lower than implied, but you will still lose money if there is a trend against you.
For example, consider a slow steady rise in the market. Realized vol (std. deviation of return which is the ratio of daily prices) will be close to zero, but short calls will go into the money and lose large amounts.
Quote from newwurldmn:
only if you if you don't delta hedge. And if you don't then you have a trade on a different timeframe (distribution trade).