Quote from Cache Landing:
... Paper losses are still losses.
...
I would caution anyone against getting in the habit of thinking that FOTM spreads lose money slower than CTM spreads.
Just another perspective:
I don't trade to optimize every $1 of my available trading margin like some others here do. So paper losses do not mean a lot to me if my position sentiments remain good. In fact, as a front month trader I usually have to wait till the 3rd week (in 4 week expiration period) in an ideal market (e.g. sideways motion for the iron condor) to see the first real signs of life of a paper gain. If I focused on paper losses in the first few weeks I'd go crazy over all the the red in my trading ledger resulting from obscenely wide B/A spreads resulting in thinly traded far OOM positions. Contrary to expectation it can even worsen paper losses as the position improves. There is always some joker who managed to pay a premium on a a wild trade at your long strike to kick up prices on a single contract trade. That will drive first time credit spread traders insane with worry.
What I focus on is the
motion and volume of the SPX relative to my expectations and especially any scheduled or unscheduled macro level events/news.
Frankly, my pragmatic challenge with credit spread trading is in trying to get out early on WINNING positions. When I am on the right side of the market it can be very challenging to get enough trading volume and interest in the wide b/a spreads at anything close to exit profitable exit debits. That can make owning IC positions a real love-hate relationship when one is winning and wanting to suck out earned equity early to move on. Normally one must pay an hefty extra trading premium off center (e.g. toward the debit side of the trade) of the B/A to get out early with winning positions.
This is why I tend to play only front month and try to do all my trading and risk management up front and leave it the hell alone when I can. Due to trading overhead my adjustments are normally limited to opportunistically
adding to positions on short IV runs or partially or fully closing them when expectations or news begin to change. This trading constraint is also the pragmatic reason why I am comfortable usually holding through expiration on my wins even when they begin to form very early.
Its emotionally difficult to give up 10-20% to slippage on winning a credit spread to get out early as it is and my bias is to look for expiration to normalize that effect (considering SET variability). But sometimes you just got to pay the MM a very hefty premium as the only way to get out of a winner early on an "all or none order" formed around a position with a substantial number of open contracts.
Seeing red paper losses is a way of life for front month credit spread traders even when winning...
TS