Quote from Maverick74:
When Did I say buying options was the answer? LOL. Come on man, you are running from one extreme to the other here.
I'm just trying to understand here. If you believe there is no edge in selling options, do you believe there's an edge in buying options? Or do you believe there's no edge at all?
If there's no edge at all, it makes no difference whether you buy or sell an option from a probability perspective.
If buying has an edge, you should be a strong buyer of options.
If selling has an edge, you should be a strong seller of options.
I believe the seller has an edge in many, but not all cases. I believe the pack wants to buy limited risk options more than they want to sell them which causes options to become more expensive than they should be in some cases.
You mentioned more options are sold on the S&P than purchased--do you have statistics to back this up? The typical S&P play is to sell calls and buy puts (hence the reason the S&P vol smile is so skewed). That being the case, why has the open interest of puts exceeded calls on the S&P for pretty much as far back as I can get stats?
Vol: You asked where I got information that Taleb mostly buys options.
http://www.gladwell.com/2002/2002_04_29_a_blowingup.htm
"He never sells options, then. He only buys them."
"So Taleb buys out-of-the-money options by the truckload."
"The day before that, it had made back eighty-five per cent of its money; the day before that, forty-eight per cent; the day before that, sixty-five per cent; and the day before that also sixty-five per cent; and, in fact-with a few notable exceptions, like the few days when the market reopened after September 11th -- Empirica has done nothing but lose money since last April."
Vol also asked "FA, maybe you could give an example of selling options incl. prob analysis, projected PnL and trading plan including defensive action/hedges."
I'm not sticking my neck out there in this environment. I've already given enough hints as to my play--I have a statistical model that I believe in. I look for over and underpriced options. Finding overpriced options is relatively easy. I position myself in a way that a series of improbable events won't hurt me.
This year, I've won 85% of my short-only options plays (which I do hedge when necessary). For this particular strategy, my average winner is 80% of my average loser. My worst loser of the year was selling volatility on wheat in September. My best winner of the year is selling volatility on the Euro. My worst loser took about 3% of my account equity. My winners have returned pretty well.
So, call me names if you'd like, but it works for me, and has for years. The secret is being able to survive worst-case events. Wheat's IV spiked from 30% to 60% and the price rallied 40% in just a few days.
To each his own. Why my approach to trading should illicit name calling is beyond me.