Originally posted by Trajan
you are better off shorting a stock rather than creating a synthetic short using options. Dividends and interest are calculated into the option already. If could leg into it for better prices, it is a possible scenario. The spread is typically too wide for non-MMs to do.
Originally posted by inandlong
metoox has 1332 posts and probably no more than 2000 words combined on these posts.![]()
Fortunately for Baron and the rest of you there are guys like him to balance my verbosity.
As to the variables I am trying to avoid, which become factored in to the price of the options, the moves I am looking for usually last 0.5 -2 months. If I use 3-4 month expirations, that should minimize the theta. With theta minimized, and a point for point appreciation in the position, do I care whether the interest and dividends are in the price of the options?
Which brings up another point. Does the synthetic short move 1 to 1 with the underlying?
Now metoox, I know you could answer that with a maximum of two words..."it depends", and more likely with one word, "yes, no, or sometimes". But would you please, most generously and graciously, expand on the answer somewhat?
Thanks gang!