Quote from cdowis:
Please help a newbie. I'm learning calendars, and just recently started on multi-month.
When there is a single month calendar, I know how to handle it, but please give me some ideas on how to handle multiple months. If the position is going bad, do you close out the entire position, flip the front month to the next month? Same question when it is going good -- how do you take profit? When you flip the front months?
I'm outta my league, here. Thanks in advance.
Quote from wilburbear:
Arbitrage in the options markets is a limited game. The U.S. options markets are among the first in the world to try to figure out how to eliminate arbitage, and therefore this form of price competition between them. All U.S. options exchanges trade the same options and all these options are fungible between exchanges. And, there's pprobably not a single academic paper which describes arbitrage as unhealthy. So arbitrageurs, with those lightning fills at the click of the mouse button rule the roost, right? Not so fast. The exchanges turned off the instant fills in arbitrage situations, and promised a "manual" fill in the pit. Only the fills never come, and the orders are merely discarded! All you guys at a national exchange should take a lesson, and copy what has been done here. Competition can be eliminated, even if it might be illegal to do so. Not filling disseminated quotes is against the SEC Firm Quote Rule, but you may forget, all these exchanges are Self-Regulatory Organizations (SRO's as they are called). Option-floor based SRO's do not list violations for price-fading to traders, even though these fades have flown like water through a fire house for at least 5 years! The SEC has also been managed out of existance. The SEC certainly knows about these issues (SEC report below), but the SEC now meets, and talks with the exchanges, arbitrageurs need not apply! Period. End of story.
There is a lawsuit about this called Last Atlantis Capital v. Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), or something similar, but part of it's been thrown out. How to profit? Become a remote market-maker. It's becoming easier (and maybe cheaper). You can trade from your home. All option exchanges now have these programs. It's much easier being the "house". You can also bust trades you don't like, after you've actually traded them. In today's environment you've gotta go with being the "house", especially when you can move your regulator to the sidelines.
http://www.thememoryhole.org/corp/finance/sec_amex_report.htm
Quote from crashbutnotburn:
Coach,
I know near the beginning of this journal you placed some partial hedges, I should probably go search for those threads again but since you're on the subject I seem to remember you actually placed a debit spread on SPY options instead of just buying the put options alone above the short strike. Would this be the strategy if you were filled on this recent put spread and if so, how many contracts would you take out on the SPY spread?
Another thing I noticed was looking at the S&P chart, back in I think it was April of 2000, the S&P rocketed up about 60 or 70 pts in just 2 or 3 days - this was kind of sobering - I assume in a situation like this it would be nearly impossible to get out without a loss but it got me thinking that maybe it would be prudent to always put some kind of partial hedge on. Maybe this has been discussed somewhere in this journal so I apologize if I'm on ground that has already been covered.