OK, I decided to buy back my short put so now I'm going to be even more bearish (which is my bias at this time) and will adjust this when my thoughts change. I've effectively "doubled up", but if the market continues to display "irrational exuberance", I'll not be out much at all.
Quote from spreadn00b:
Knowing myself, I knew this would happen and I probably forced the situation a bit (and in a paper trading account no less to eliminate emotions!). Feeling bearish when the SPY was at 132.00, I opened a put debit spread (DEC 06 130P/126P) for .90 knowing that I might do something like this in a real account to help when the market went down (a hedge against my bullish positions, which are all quite green). Of course, I'm less concerned with taking profits in my paper trading and much more concerned about learning the risk management ropes.
In my plan, I said that I would consider adjustments around 134.00 and here we are! My plan says that I should consider
a) Buying back the short put if my bearish feeling is raised (and it is).
b) Selling a call credit spread if my bearish feeling is raised.
c) Exiting the position at a loss if my feeling is bullish.
I'm going between a) and b), but b) seems like it locks in a bit of a loss while a) seems riskier since I'm basically long an OTM put. c) does not fit my "feeling" at the present moment and I still want it to hedge bullish positions that are on.
Not that there is really a correct answer I understand, but is this clear thinking or am I completely missing the boat here? Is it too early to adjust? The spread is now trading @ 0.6, maybe it needs more time?
I appreciate any help.
Thank you.
Not sure if I'll be successful but will give it a go and see how i fare. So basically im currently all over the place trying different things but leaning towards credit diagonals. But whatever the strategy, this market action is not too good for any kind of premium selling or short gamma? strategy, be they credit spreads or credit diagonals. 