SPX Credit Spread Trader

Quote from ryank:

You want to do a put diagonal with the VIX relatively low because your spread would increase in value as the VIX would increase (to a point). If you can do a put diagonal and the VIX continues to increase on the selloff you would come out all right as long as you picked good strikes and managed the trade well.

The spread might not increase at sell off b/c of the effect of delta. The vega increases the spread, but delta decreases the spread. No matter what strategies (unless delta-neutral) you use, you always need to consider delta.

Percy
 
Nope... you nuetralize VEGA... will take a loss on the Credit Spread. Remember, the credit spread is the same month, you need the next month out in the diagonal... which will increase with VEGA. Credit spreads are delta driven... really not THETA driven until the last 3 days to expiration.

A risk analysis program will show you exactly what will happen... and you won't like it.



Quote from yip1997:

I think you can start with FOTM credit spread like Coach. If the market sell off, do the diagonal. The diagonal can serve as a hedge for credit spread.

Case 1: Market continues to drop
risk management for FOTM credit spread might result in small loss, but your diagonal makes a decent profit.
Case 2: Sideway
Both FOTM and Diagonal makes good profit.
Case 3: Go up
The diagonal will make a huge profit b/c of vega.

What do you think?
 
Same margin but definitely not the same risk. Also, your broker will not need to call you early out of a SPX spread but a huge swing in the ES futures and IV might get you a broker call on your short ES puts and a tidy loss.

So in addition to comparing the initial margins, factor in the max risk as well to determine if the reward is worth it.


Quote from scoobie27:

Just a follow up Margin requirements for naked ES options.

ES Sep futures ~ 1268

Sell 1 1265 AUG PUT FOP
Initial margin = 4681.87
Maintenance margin = 4345.50

So if i sold 10 contracts i would need around $46818
Premium ~ 15

Sell 10 SPX 1260/1250, margin is $10,000
Premium ~ 3.25

46818/10000 *3.25 = 15.21

Roughly the same received for margin.
 
Usually not much 'extended' or reversion premium available in the call side because of the nature of VIX. But.. occasionally... on FED 'big mouth' days or extended long monthly rallies, you will see a little. It's definitely a Put side play.



Quote from scoobie27:

Murray, I was just thinking the same. I was looking at Big Charts Vix below and noticed that between Feb and May there wasn't much vol spikes to place these back month puts or even help with the diagonals positions.

You mentioned writing the naked back month DEC 1175 PUT as an example. Can you also do the same on the call side?

eg. writing a back month DEC 1345 CALL ?
 
We do it with puts... because it has a nicer SKEW.. will hold downside put values for the next month out... much better than call side.

By middle... we project an area of the diagonal where we may want to profit from between the call and put side diagonals.

Last months positions were 1305c, 1250p, 1225p, 1195p.... so we had 'two' middles... for a much larger extended profit range. Certainly not a higher profit range... but larger. Although 24% wasn't bad! I think our B.E.'s were like 1310-1180

Quote from ffa99:

Thanks M!

By "middle of the range" do you mean between the current price and the established short? Can the same be done with Call Diags or is that not a VEGA play?
 
Delta can increase or decrease the return... pending on how close to the short strike and at what volatility level there is...

Delta move down is nicer... but delta move beyond and way beyong the upside call... would not be nice. In general.. delta is less of a concern.

Now.. with our four position diagonal... delta really had little effect. We set up our profit window large... and about equal throughout a large window.


Quote from yip1997:

The spread might not increase at sell off b/c of the effect of delta. The vega increases the spread, but delta decreases the spread. No matter what strategies (unless delta-neutral) you use, you always need to consider delta.

Percy
 
Quote from Sailing:

Delta can increase or decrease the return... pending on how close to the short strike and at what volatility level there is...

Delta move down is nicer... but delta move beyond and way beyong the upside call... would not be nice. In general.. delta is less of a concern.

Now.. with our four position diagonal... delta really had little effect. We set up our profit window large... and about equal throughout a large window.


You are right. The four position diagonal is pretty much delta neural, and is the best to establish when the vol is low, IMO.

I will not say the vol in current environment is low. I'll wait till vix is close to 10.
 
This is not an apples-apples comparison.

First, selling a near ATM ES option has almost the same margin as holding the futures contract outright. Which makes sense, as your risk is similar between the two positions.

Second, you're comparing an naked option with a spread. That's perfectly fine and valid, but don't call it a follow up on margin requirements. If you want to compare ES and SPX margin, show both of them with a naked option sale, or both of them with a spread. But not naked versus spread.

Third, if you want to collect 3.25 points of premium to compare with the SPX 1260/1250 spread, try selling 2 ES 1210 puts for 3.30. Overnight margin for the 2 naked 1210P is about $4000. For $10k margin to compare with your SPX spread, you would collect $825, versus $325 for the spread. Obviously the risk/reward and %win/loss greatly differs between the two trades. Or compare the ES spread which collects about 2.5 pts, but has a margin for the spread of about $400.

I leave it to the reader to choose their own r/r and %w/l. But at least make sure you are looking at the right numbers to make the comparison.

Quote from scoobie27:

Just a follow up Margin requirements for naked ES options.

ES Sep futures ~ 1268

Sell 1 1265 AUG PUT FOP
Initial margin = 4681.87
Maintenance margin = 4345.50

So if i sold 10 contracts i would need around $46818
Premium ~ 15

Sell 10 SPX 1260/1250, margin is $10,000
Premium ~ 3.25

46818/10000 *3.25 = 15.21

Roughly the same received for margin.
 
Quote from yip1997:

Hi Mav,

Like to meet you again in the option thread.

I don't know how the span margin is calculated. It seems that it is related to the probability of the loss, but it is MTM.

With haircut, it seems that it uses a fixed % (15% up and down) and calculate the max loss within that range.

Since span is MTM, I assume it only calculates the potential loss in one day. For low volatility index like ES, the potential loss in one day based on the probability that goes up or down 15% is very small.

Can you give us some examples? Can you compare the span and haircut margin for these examples.

1. Say ES 1200 naked put
2. ES 1200/1175 Aug Credit spread
3. Long 1200 Aug, short 1175 Sep

Haircut on the SP is 6% to the upside and 8% to the downside. Yes, it is fixed. The problem with span is it's variable margin. Meaning it can go up on you without notice and force a liquidation. And it usually happens at the worst possible time during a big selloff. I've seen span margin double overnight. And if you can't meet it, they liquidate. Span also does nothing for the long gamma trader. In other words, when you buy options, you have to pay 100% of the premium. Span is only useful if you sell naked options.

Also with span, you can't mix and match products. If you trade ES options, you will get relief on your margin if you trade ES futures against it, but nothing else. With a haircut, you can trade, spy options, es options, spx options, oex options, spyders, even dow, nasdaq, russell options and futures and ETF's and get haircut relief on all those products as one big position.

There really is no comparison between the two. Span is very limiting. Haircut and cross margin is much more flexible and all encompassing.
 
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