I gravitate with flies to the other side. I usually only trade them with one day to go. Most of the profits come when the fly opens or goes full carry which with high IV stocks doesn't really happen till the end. I need to start looking into doing some longer term ones with lower profit targets as well but they seem to move pretty slow until they get close to expiration.I understand they better not be traded to expiration, I am aiming at 10%-20% approx from IV and theta decay as I think the delta would get more complicated to manage closer to expiry.
I see things about if a position is losing, you buy something else such that deltas are even. Like if your delta is -400, you go over one strike and sell enough that the delta of your position is around 400.
What does that do?
I simulated this in Think or Swim but don't really get it, it looked like a trade long.
Delta hedging allows one to work through and derive the pricing models for options
Brown lives in a $250K hovel. His 20YO avatar pic is seen throughout Dunning Kruger's latest edition.
BTW, what is the barrier to entry on these vol-threads? Because clearly it's as porous as Trump'sassholefence.
TOS = think or swimYou mention TOS here is their write-up.
https://tastytradenetwork.squarespace.com/tt/blog/tasty-bite-trading-delta-neutral
yep I need to do this. I learned about Delta and Theta, this is it.Delta hedging (as per the title of the thread) aims to remove directionality from a trade by offsetting the delta of one position (say the -400 in your example above) with another position (i.e. you would need a +400 delta in your 'hedge'). Your combined portfolio delta should be as close to zero as possible.
Rather than directionality, your total portfolio will now be more impacted by other 'Greeks' (time, vol, rates, ...).
It is important to realize that delta hedging is not static, read up on Gamma (and other greeks) if you need more info.