Quote from rdemyan:
I saw this example trade and am wondering what it is called and if anybody has made similar trades or has some comments on this type of trade.
XEO at 585
Sell 1 XEO August 565 calls @ $24.25
Sell 1 XEO August 605 puts @ $20.25
Profit potential: Max of $450 if the XEO is between 565 and 605. This max profit is presumably just the difference between the two premiums $44.50 and the difference in the spread of $40.
Note that Deep In-The-Money options are being sold here.
Of course any number of contracts can be sold. Margin is a problem but can be managed by buying OTM long positions (example the 625 call and the 545 put). This would be a 60 point spread. The approximate cost of the longs would reduce the profit potential from $450 to about $300. ROI would be about 5%.
Comments, anyone?
It's called a Gut, i.e. ITM strangle. It is the synthetic equivalent of an OTM strangle (in this case 605 call and 565 put). The only difference is that you tie up more funds in ITM one, the intrinsic value of $40. In fact, I bet the OTM strangle was selling for 4.5, give or take a dime. Generally, the bid-ask spreads are tighter in OTM options so trading ITM syntetic equivalents means more slippage, but occasionally you can get a better fill. However, then you have to take into account the extra capital tied up in the trade.
The max profit is the same in both trades and is the time value, i.e. 4.5.
