Quote from sle:
If you know the range, you best bet is to sell puts at the bottom end of the range and sell calls at the top.
Well, you can't have it all and a free lunch with a cherry on the top, sire...Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Ah, maybe I forgot to explain properly - I mean you would exit the put spread near the bottom of the range, before you put on your bull call spread. Essentially you'd be making bets on moderate falls when the range is at its highs, and vice versa when at its lows. The spread would be used to keep the vol exposure moderate, since you expect it to decline.
I have tried with butterflies, but the problem is that your results at expiry depend so much on luck, what if its at the bottom of the range at expiry? You would be right on the range, right on falling vol, and still have a bad result. If you use iron condors wide enough to avoid this risk, your return kinda sucks. Plus you have those wonderful 4 commissions and bid-offer spreads to pay
At least with the vertical spreads, it is fairly obvious what to do. I'm fine with taking a directional view, since I would only put these on when I think I can anticipate it to some extent.
Reason I don't want to gamma hedge is I would only put on short vol positions when I'm pretty confident about a range - if I'm wrong then the other spread leg will cap the loss.
Someone might suggest just using outrights. The problem here is your outlier risk in case of some news event; and the risk of being faked out if there is a false breakout for a day or two. Trading ranges are notorious for triggering stops at either end, then reversing a few days later to re-enter the range. Having on a limited-risk options position lets you sit through such noise with impunity.
Disclaimer, I am a total noob at trading volatility, so I am probably missing some fairly obvious stuff here.
Direction is the main course. IV is gravy.Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Let's say you can correctly forecast declining volatility. Is there any way to profit from this reliably and with good reward to risk ratio, without gamma hedging?
Second question - if you can predict a trading range (it's size and duration), what is the most profitable options approach? Would using any options strategy provide superior R/R to just buying near the lows and reversing near the highs in the underlying?
Quote from sle:
Personally, I think your best bet is to buy some vxx put spreads or even sell VXX calls. For practical purposes, it expresses all of your views (the range view as well as low vol view) and you take advantage of the VXX roll decay.