When are you suggesting he buys the call spread??
At inception? Thats entirely different position
When the stock moves x percent???
With your hedging,he will be in a loose 1x2,i.e + 1x-1x-1
If he is delta hedging,hes definetly over hedging at short strike....
And why should one magically "overhedge", or delta hedge at short strike as opposed to
taking a loss at strike or having a stop loss in place?
The strategy stinks,and the risk management is worse
At inception? Thats entirely different position
When the stock moves x percent???
With your hedging,he will be in a loose 1x2,i.e + 1x-1x-1
If he is delta hedging,hes definetly over hedging at short strike....
And why should one magically "overhedge", or delta hedge at short strike as opposed to
taking a loss at strike or having a stop loss in place?
The strategy stinks,and the risk management is worse
I suggested a spread. A spread = selling a call and buying a call of with much more otm strike AT THE SAME TIME, not when the shit is hitting the fan. And yes he will still be getting his free lunch, just not as free as before. If he wants PURE PURE free lunch, well then he faces assignment with short squeeze that could result in potentially unlimited loss so there is really no free lunch in the world.
Short put is still a naked short with no downside protection and should the underlying tanks, he's suffering huge losses the other way the same as buying stock + shorting a call. The only thing is if he's buying the stock when the price is closer to the short call strike, the possibility of it going up further is higher.
You ride the short delta when you can and when you see you no longer can, you try to cover. It's the same thing when you are shorting a stock and then when he sees he's about to be short-squeezed, he buys the stock back and the OP is not planning to buy more than his short call; he's buying exactly the same quantity as his short call, 100 shares for each call. If he's buying only 50% of the short call quantity i.e. 50 shares for 1 call, his short call won't be covered so he's not really overhedging. From the vol. point of view, even though the call option today might be only at 0.50 delta, moving 1/2 as fast as the underlying or only has or close to 50% possibility of going ITM but if it's going ITM, then eventually it will become 1 delta and by that time, what are you going to do? Buy the other half at the price higher than the strike and suffer an instant loss? You might as well buy the whole thing so the entire option is covered if the price is already at 0.5 delta or close to it.
Anyway that's how I see it.
