Quote from nazzdack:
1) For contracts whose lowest price is zero; i.e. stocks, bonds, grains, metals, energy, the maximum risk of a short-put is "Strike Price minus premium", a finite number, not an unlimited number.
2) Short-term interest rate contracts indexed to 100: i.e eurodollars, the maximum risk of a short-put is potentially infinite. The contract price can go below zero. If short-term interest rates went from 3% to 1000%, the futures would go from +97.00 DOWN to -900.00.
3) In the days after the "Crash of 1987", all options sky-rocketed in value. It was most obvious in the out-of-the-money strike prices. From that point forward, volatility skews "smiled" instead of "smirked".
4) The short-put can be slightly less risky if it's initiated out-of-the-money and offset before it gets in-the-money. That way, it may have better liquidity at-the-money before it goes against you too far.
5) I took too long to compose this. 5 additional posts came in while I put this together. :eek: