Quote from Maverick74:
The insurance company is a terrible example for claiming the selling of options has positive expectancy. The reason is because it's not the product itself that offers edge but rather the price at which the insurance company sells the policy for. They only make money because they can sell their policies for substantial premiums to their fair value.
Sooner or later you guys are just going to have to come to terms with the fact that all of you are trading with negative edge and the only ones on this thread that are going to be profitable are the ones that can actually TRADE. Selling 1 to 2 sigma options is not a ticket to the promised land.
Quote from tplast:
Do you say this because you get better premiums on the puts vs the calls for the same OTM distance? It may be so, but the put buyer will benefit from the corresponding increase on volatility on a down move.
Quote from Eric99:
Yip,
I might agree with you, still thinking..... The underlying can only have one realized (ex post) volatility. It is unknown in advance. But skew exists, there are different IV's at each strike. Only one can be proven 'correct' after the fact. Is that the logic that underpins your statement?
If so, does it follow that the sale of call verticals and the purchase of put verticals also yields positive expectancy (before commissions/slippage)?
Quote from Maverick74:
This is 100% false. Options are empirically undervalued, especially the fat tails, which means the seller actually has a negative expectancy. Over a small series of data points, the expectancy is relatively flat. However, over a large series of data points, options become more and more undervalued. How is this possible. Because it's not possible to price a put on 9/11. It's not possible to price a put on Enron. It's not possible to price a put for the crash of 87. These puts are substantially undervalued. What this means is, if you sell enough puts over a long enough period of time, your expectancy will go from zero to more and more negative.
There have been numerous amounts of academic papers written in the difficulties of pricing fat tail options, particularly by Nasim Taleb.
Quote from rallymode:
You cannot create positive expectancy once a position has run against you. Offseting a bad spread isnt creating positive expectancy. Some like to call this risk management but it does nothing to add expectancy.
Quote from Maverick74:
I never sell ATM options. And "best" is a very subjective term. There is no true "best" strategy. There is only good traders, not good strategies.
Quote from yip1997:
I didn't mean spreads. I meant naked put writing.