Quick question while iam pondering over this, what model of pricing are you implying or using here in the calculations?
Model doesn't really matter, since it's mainly put/call-parity we're talking about.
Quick question while iam pondering over this, what model of pricing are you implying or using here in the calculations?
PS. In general, treatment of dividends is really strange in the risk neutral world. What happens to the stock if it keeps paying high divs and yet keeps going down, does it go to zero earlier? what happens to the stock vol when it pays a large div, does the vol go up proportionately and does the model assume that? Wouldn't it make sense that non-div stocks have to have lower vol (since they got all that non-volatile cash sitting in their coffers)?
All right, alternative scenario - really long trade, fixed divs (say 10y). Do you price the forward from the current div? then it will go negative. Do you price the forward based on div yield? in that case, you are having a serious fwd divergence based on terminal spot.At one point, when they are still paying dividends and have that cash on hand, they would trade below bookvalue/liqidation value... someone will buy that shit...

All right, alternative scenario - really long trade, fixed divs (say 10y). Do you price the forward from the current div? then it will go negative. Do you price the forward based on div yield? in that case, you are having a serious fwd divergence based on terminal spot.
Just saying![]()
--- If all 3 answers are YES, I can post a ThinkScript study that makes easy work of evaluating selected securities for an edge based on historical data.
How do you know the stock is going to drop? Just because it trades ex-dividend?
So... how come you know the stock is dropping past the dividend amount?
Because they do, that is how the dividend amount is included in the price. Watch ETR tomorrow, 87 cents dividend after today's close. Closed at 71.67, should open below 71....
We don't but if it does, that is a good direction for my vertical spread. They could also bounce back, there are no rules for the behaviour...
Okay, but that drop is because of the corporate action, which is already priced in options pricing...