riskarb's trading journal

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Quote from Cache Landing:

Or a "negative index print" as this should correlate with an IV increase?

I think you mentioned this on the combo to fly conversion thread, but do you have a preference on the length of time you allow before converting?



Typically no more than 7d for front month options,
 
Quote from IV_Trader:

without any price movement , after how many days this position becomes profitable ( on theoretical bases) ? Given fast decay on binary , is it two days in this case ?

2d on an 11d bet is needed to beat the execution edge loss through theta.
 
Quote from rdemyan:

Riskarb:

Hope you don't mind me asking an OT question. In OC's forum we've been discussing trying to mitigate the effect a black swan would have on bull puts by buying slightly OTM or ATM VIX options. There's been a lot of discussion that this won't work. In other words, the expected large rise in volatility resulting from a black swan won't necessarily translate to a corresponding VIX call price that we could actually get (b/a may be huge or there might not be any takers that would buy our VIX calls).

What's your take on this and do you have a recommendation for how to hedge against the black swan event?

Thanks and sorry if I'm polluting your thread :)

The options are twice removed from any relevance to the strip vols on SPX. I wouldn't feel comfortable buying otm VBI options. ITM VBI calls are a relatively safe bet provided you isolate the convergence as time passes and allow for some contraction beyond greek-risks. I've seen wild premiums and discounts on the futures/cash, so any confidence in pricing is difficult to achieve. If trading VIX, buy ITM calls only.

I am a huge fan of bear risk-reversals as Cat-insurance for these DOTM verticals -- scaling into the reversal-hedge as conditions dictate. Sell 20 SPX put verticals and sell one reversal in ES options [SPAN treatment]. Scale into further hedging on strength or as MtM gains allow. There are a million variations on the theme, but know that you can't hedge these w/o long gamma. The reversal is a direct gamma and vega hedge. Don't trade these unless paired with a hedge.
 
Riskarb:
Interesting "foreign" world for me.
What is your formal education and work background where you absorbed all these strategies? Are you self-employed? Fasinating high finance to a plain futures trader. I'm sure the majority have a million questions.
 
Just to be clear your saying not to trade the bull put vertical credit spreads without the risk reversal hedge, right?

Quote from riskarb:

Don't trade these unless paired with a hedge.
 
riskarb,

great journal you have going on here. I am a long time lurker in your journals. The exotic part goes over my head but great education nonetheless.

I have a couple of questions about your delta bets if you get a chance to answer. In your last trade(SPX risk reversal), you position the strikes at about equal distance from the market.

Do you have any set parameters that you follow in your delta bets(bull or bear) when choosing the +/- strike with regards to distance from market(credit/debit position) other than to be short downside gamma and long upside gamma or size at the +/- strike other than to take as lil net gamma risk as possible?

What was the exit strategy if market moved down? Temporary lock with the ES or offset?
 
how best to trade high volatility betting on its revertion to lower levels? it is tempting to take advantage of high volatility that we are seeing today, but high volatility implies more risk.

is there anything better than simply writing straddles/strangles? I would like to limit my risk.

my broker won't let me trade Vix directly.
 
Quote from TraderRobb:

Riskarb:
Interesting "foreign" world for me.
What is your formal education and work background where you absorbed all these strategies? Are you self-employed? Fasinating high finance to a plain futures trader. I'm sure the majority have a million questions.

Westinghouse[40th], dual in bio and maths. Post-grad in another field. Dad was a cboe member and clued me into basic arbs and the like. Haven't read any texts/papers beyond Jarrows book on pricing and a few others that include Rubinstein's binomial and Neil Chriss' stuff while at Chicago. Also, Nelken on exotics at Chicago as well. Any interest in theory should be handled model-down.

I ran a private fund with a buddy from Wilmette, IL at 18. He was an IT guy who built a link to DOT/superDOT for index arbs. Had a falling-out and went on to trade FOs, equity options, FX otc options, etc... did some non-industry ed from 88-95 as well.

I've traded for 3 mid-market[100-800mil] funds over the last 5 years. My brother runs a vcap fund and a market-neutral fund for which I manage the sub-account.
 
Quote from rdemyan:

Just to be clear your saying not to trade the bull put vertical credit spreads without the risk reversal hedge, right?

Correct. You're paid for selling bear-stops... you can replicate the hedge as very little loss of edge via -delta bear reversals. I would always sell those verticals with a R/R.
 
Quote from rallymode:

riskarb,

great journal you have going on here. I am a long time lurker in your journals. The exotic part goes over my head but great education nonetheless.

I have a couple of questions about your delta bets if you get a chance to answer. In your last trade(SPX risk reversal), you position the strikes at about equal distance from the market.

Do you have any set parameters that you follow in your delta bets(bull or bear) when choosing the +/- strike with regards to distance from market(credit/debit position) other than to be short downside gamma and long upside gamma or size at the +/- strike other than to take as lil net gamma risk as possible?

What was the exit strategy if market moved down? Temporary lock with the ES or offset?

The premium neutral, 25d risk-reversal is IMHO the best intraday reversal to trade, proven in simulation. It accumulates gammas very quickly if correct on direction. To be symmetrical requires selling cheap gamma/dgamma against the chosen direction, can't be avoided.

The ES hedge against the r/r is used to get flat prior to covering the reversal. Often I will make a bet on the immediate direction and try to leg the offset. The last two were combo orders on open and close.
 
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