Mo have you meandered over to the Yahoo BWB group yet?
Wrong. A delta of 1 (or 0.01 as most would say) means that the option premium will change with 1/100th of the amount the underlyer changes. Nothing more, nothing less.Quote from tower:
Specifically, I believe that the price of low delta options are heavily skewed in favor of the buyer. If an option has a delta of 1 - then it is defined as having a 1% chance of settling ITM.
Quote from taowave:
I am a bit late to this party,but id you are interested in the merits of option writing,check out
http://www.cboe.com/micro/bxm/Callan_CBOE.pdf
it seems pretty clear that selling puts is was a better strategy than buying the S&P the last 13 years....
Quote from Trader KGB:
6 pages of analysis, in-depth comparisons of Sharpe Ratios, not one mention of the word "commissions". I'd really be interested in finding out how much of that whopping 10 BP edge over simply buying and holding the S&P 500 would be eroded away by the commissions and taxes (on writing monthly covered calls) for the 18 years since 1988.
My guess is the buy & hold strategy would come out far ahead.
Quote from taowave:
how much commision is there on selling a naked put???
Quote from Trader KGB:
Their strategy described involves "buying a portfolio of the S&P 500 and writing a covered call against that portfolio". In addition to the option commissions, it also involves the commission of re-buying that portfolio each & every month it is called away from you.
It's a hypothetical analysis, and their study timeframe begins in 1988 (after the crash, how convenient). Originating far before the dawn of the ETF spider, it would've been quite difficult to "buy the S&P 500" and write a call against it, unless they were trading futures.
In any case, the conclusion is that their strategy netted 10BP, yes 0.10% greater annual gain than simply buying and holding the S&P. I'm saying that 0.10% would be wiped out in any real-world scenario where commissions, taxes, and fees come into play.
Quote from Trader KGB:
Their strategy described involves "buying a portfolio of the S&P 500 and writing a covered call against that portfolio". In addition to the option commissions, it also involves the commission of re-buying that portfolio each & every month it is called away from you.
It's a hypothetical analysis, and their study timeframe begins in 1988 (after the crash, how convenient). Originating far before the dawn of the ETF spider, it would've been quite difficult to "buy the S&P 500" and write a call against it, unless they were trading futures.
In any case, the conclusion is that their strategy netted 10BP, yes 0.10% greater annual gain than simply buying and holding the S&P. I'm saying that 0.10% would be wiped out in any real-world scenario where commissions, taxes, and fees come into play.
Quote from TempusFugit:
Actually, the claim is that BXM produces superior risk adjusted returns: same absolute return at lower risk.