Disregarding why one might want to put on a synthetic long instead of just buying the underlying, does such a position tend to behave like the equivalent long stock over the life of the position? Are there pitfalls to be aware of? Assume this is on an index or some other underlying that pays no dividend, if it matters.
A "what if" might be what happens if the S&P 500 shoots up (or tanks) after I have simultaneously purchased an ATM call and sold an ATM put on SPX. Will my profit (or loss) tend to track the S&P "exactly"?
When the position is ATM, my P/L calculation shows delta ~ 100 with almost no gamma, vega, or theta. If I take that pricing and simulate the same trade after some 5% drop (i.e., I look at a synthetic long with a long 5% OTM call and a short 5% ITM put), I see a delta that has dropped to ~ 95 but the other Greeks are still pretty much hedged. The "current value" as shown in my P/L calculation is about right (down some $10K, which makes sense given that the position was initiated as a synthetic 100 shares on SPX and the index is down ~ $100).
Am I missing something?
A "what if" might be what happens if the S&P 500 shoots up (or tanks) after I have simultaneously purchased an ATM call and sold an ATM put on SPX. Will my profit (or loss) tend to track the S&P "exactly"?
When the position is ATM, my P/L calculation shows delta ~ 100 with almost no gamma, vega, or theta. If I take that pricing and simulate the same trade after some 5% drop (i.e., I look at a synthetic long with a long 5% OTM call and a short 5% ITM put), I see a delta that has dropped to ~ 95 but the other Greeks are still pretty much hedged. The "current value" as shown in my P/L calculation is about right (down some $10K, which makes sense given that the position was initiated as a synthetic 100 shares on SPX and the index is down ~ $100).
Am I missing something?