Hmm. sorry, no, in posting #107 I don't see any 2015 mentioned.Your post 107.
Hmm. sorry, I don't get it. 6% profit annually isn't enough IMO, at least not for me.100-share equivalent, cash-secured, equals $9,833. Trading one contract ($145 credit) per 100-share equivalent in capital. 1.7% return to July exp. 4% annualized.
So, assume that you go the other way, and trade as many as Reg-T will allow:
85-lots per $100K. 12% return out to July. 33% annualized. This assumes (moronically-so) that you'll never receive a variation-call on your PEP short-put position, and that you can replicate the same vola figure when you roll in July.
Let's assume that you apply a 5x cushion (5x initial margin = 16 lots/$100K).
A 6% annual return for selling naked puts.
Hmm. sorry, no, in posting #107 I don't see any 2015 mentioned.
Hmm. sorry, I don't get it. 6% profit annually isn't enough IMO, at least not for me.
For me it should be at least 25% p.a., just my humble opinion...
The whole tricks using margin and leverage have the sole purpose of increasing the profit,
ie. multiplying by the leverage, which is simply this multiplication factor:
1 / (own_money / margin_or_loan)
And "cushion" usually is used in conjunction with stop-level (stop or trailing stop).
This is the expiration date "the 15th of July" (in current year)!!! ;-)))I'm out. I don't help the indignant-types.
Here's where you stated 2015:
I did a quick scan of the S&P500 stocks and found that there are much better stocks suited for this strategy, for example PEP (Pepsi) Jul 15 Puts with strike $90 for about $1.70 premium,
This is the expiration date "July the 15th" (of current year)!!! ;-)))
The 15 does not mean the year 2015! ;-)
Specifying the day explicitly makes the day calculation easier. Otherwise one would have to look up in the calendar...lol just use July.
The PEP posting was made on 2016-03-02-Wed at 09:15 EST, ie. 15 minutes before market open,
and used the EOD database as basis, ie. the EOD-prices of the day before.
So, no time-travel here...
And these were the quotes at 10:31AM, ie. 1h after market opening:
I would say this example is just distracting/distorting from what is mainly discussed here, ie. the recent PEP example.Great, how about applying 20% of Reg-T? (Explicitly, 5x leverage)
$145 credit for shorting the put. $240 in initial req. Short 416 contracts per $100K in capital.
PEP drops to $90 next month. Your puts are now at $4.
You have an unrealized loss of $67,000; but wait, it's realized, as they liquidated your account, at-market.