Quote from momoneythansens:
Alas, no free trade if I understand you correctly. Entering diagonals based on getting a credit/minimizing debit is potentially a dangerous exercise if not looked at in the context of the other variables IMHO.
One can think of diagonals as a reduced cost calendar spreads.
What reduces the cost/debit? The embedded credit spread gives you a credit which offsets some/all of the calendar's debit.
Where's the downside to this wonderful arrangement of getting a calendar for free? You've just increased your risk - think of the risk involved in a short vertical/credit spread.
A diagonal where the strike difference between the short leg and the long leg is large in order to reduce the debit of the diagonal etc. is tantamount to having a wide vertical embedded in the diagonal. We all know that wide verticals have larger risk than narrower verticals. This is reflected in Reg-T margin requirements of the position.
A diagonal where the short strike is FOTM is tantamount to having a FOTM embedded vertical in the diagonal. We all know what can happen with these: the embedded vertical sold for $0.50 can go to $9.50 if the underlying moves against you. Risk profile can look like a cliff almost as scary as front month FOTM credit spreads.
Most diagonals, especially if there are a number of months between front and back month, are however dominated by the calendar component day to day.
To echo RR comments on another thread, it is wise to understand calendars and verticals before looking at diagonals for multiple reasons...and then a double diagonal is yet another kind of animal as the two diagonals have opposing (delta) and complimentary (vega) desires.
2 cents.
MoMoney.
What..no free lunch ? :eek:
Always good to hear your thoughtful dissections of a strategy.
I too was actually thinking about these wider diagonals to pay less of a debit and was wondering what the catch was.
I like Murray's strikes of 20 or 25 points apart because the delta of the long cancels the short. Not perfectly, but close enough to cancel out the risk when the underlying head towards your short.
With the wider strikes the diagonal is cheaper or even give you a credit if you want to but there's isn't the same amount of delta protection from the long option if underlying moves towards your short strike. Hence one would sweat bullets just like a credit vertical scenario.
Now to look at FFOTM diagonal.....with 25 wide strikes
Just thinking aloud.
