Quote from FullyArticulate:
Think about this from the other side of your transaction.
Lets use your values for SPY:
Sell 10 SPY (142.28) Dec 09 190 puts at 47.80
So, you're the guy who bought these SPY puts for essentially $.08. The next dividend coming up for SPY is in March and will likely be about $.55. After the dividend, SPY immediately drops $.55.
So, you hold the stock through div-ex, pocket the $.55 dividend and exercise your puts. You will have made $.55 - $.08 (x100x10)
The guy who sold the option now owns a stock that's worth $.55 less than it was a day ago. He can sell another 190 put and sell the stock, but he will have lost the bid/ask on the option and .55 on the stock.
Wash, rinse, repeat for the next 3 years.
It is possible for you to make more than the risk free rate on your short puts if the buyer of your puts isn't optimally exercising. There are dozens of academic papers on this.
I hope that helps a little. Just look at the transaction from the other side to see what will happen.
Good Point. Perhaps the best strategy is to deal with SPY puts that have some more time value. Then, if your broker will consider them "covered," your rate of return gets more interesting.
AZD
