Quote from optioncoach:
Still looking for some mini-bounce in the S&P overnight/pre-market/morning. I am not as bearish as I am neutral, i.e. lot of sideways movement over the next week or so. 1250/1270 with perhaps a dip to that 1245 level.
Quote from optioncoach:
I actually always glance at the ATM straddle and try to make sure my strikes are well outside of that range at a minimum.
If I can translate riskarb's comment into our English (and risk arb feel free to correct me), is that the ATM straddle is being priced by the market maker on current IV estimates to cover the potential range of index moves from that point to expiration. If the index is at 1260 and the 1260 JAN straddle is at $40.00 then the MM are pricing based on an expected distribution of 1300 and 1220 of the prices to expiration. Since they want to price the straddle so that they are covered on buy or sales, you assume that their straddle pricing is a their good estimate of the market range they see as of that moment over the life of the straddle. This changes daily with volatility and index changes but gives you the range distribution.
Quote from andysmith:
Coach,
Thanks for the translation. So in your example, 1220 to 1300 is the MM's expected distribution of pricing over the life of the straddle -- but is that 1 sd (68% of the time) or does sd not come into play here?
Thanks!
Quote from andysmith:
Coach,
Thanks for the translation. So in your example, 1220 to 1300 is the MM's expected distribution of pricing over the life of the straddle -- but is that 1 sd (68% of the time) or does sd not come into play here?
Thanks!
Quote from skdoyle1:
Could you also state in plain english what a :
Standard Distribution is (I know its from stat, but how does it play into pricing the spx)
What a Handle is.
sd