Quote from stevegee58:
Any comments are welcome.
I've discovered through banging my head against the wall that selling calls in a bull market is a bad idea. That said, I can't reliably predict what will happen in any coming month when I put on a trade. The bull market could end, right? Or at least take a pause for a month in which case I profit.
So the VIX call hedge is for downside protection for the put credit spread? I haven't traded VIX at all.
Also, are you using weeklies or monthlies?
Sorry, on vacation so not posting much, just to explain this and gaps you see in the coming weeks. Not going to be back to full time til June.
Yeah, since the verticals are well south of where the market is now, VIX calls would be decent protection against an event that would put the verticals ITM. Using monthlies, matching the June expiring SPX against the June expiring VIX calls.
Momentum right now is clearly with the bulls. Only a sudden political event would send the market south far enough to challenge these verticals, IMO, and any such event would be accompanied by a large move up in the VIX, so I figure it's a good hedge given that reasoning. A slow grind south would render the VIX useless as a hedge, but that's atypical behavior for a bull and would be a good reason to cut losses and sit tight and see if a bear is developing.
Would buy June 14 VIX calls to match against the SPX verticals, at a value of about one half that of the credit received on the verticals. June VIX futures are at around 15 right now, so those calls are somewhat ITM.
I always assume the hedge on anything I do will go to zero and so figure my net credit at the value of the credit on the sold side minus what I have to pay for the hedge. Given the upside potential if VIX takes off on an event, I have in effect a limited risk downside on the verticals vs unlimited profit on the VIX calls.