Saturday 11 June 2016

June 11 - Postmortem: SPY long calendar spread

Pinning the tail on the donkey.  It's a classic birthday game that I'm sure we've all played (or at least a derivative of the game) .  [Heh heh...did you see what I did there?]

A calendar spread is the options version of the game.  The objective is to guess what the price of the underlying will be at a certain point in time.  A long calendar spread is one of many strategies a trader can employ if a trader believes the underlying stock will remain range-bound for a period of time.  A calendar spread can use either calls or puts.  The position involves a long call (put) position at a given strike and a short call (put) position at the same strike but with an earlier expiry and is generally opened for a net debit.

The objective of the spread is for the underlying stock to settle as close to the strike price as possible when the short option expires.  When the short option expires at-the-money (ATM), the spread between the long option and the short option is maximized.  If the short option expires in-the-money (ITM), the delta of the short option is 1, while the delta of the long option is less than 1.  Therefore, the spread between the options will decrease for every tick the short option is ITM.  On the flip side, if the short option expires out-of-the-money (OTM), the value of the short option is still zero, but the value of the long option will be lower.  Therefore, you can see that the bliss scenario for the calendar spread is for the underlying to pin the strike of the short option at expiry.  This is what happened for me with SPY this week.

On May 25, SPY was trading a little over $209 while I was short a couple of straddles on the SPY with 203 and 206 strikes.  My SPY positions were -delta, meaning my positions would make money if SPY went down, but would lose money if SPY went up.  I wanted to adjust my SPY position to provide myself with some upside risk protection in the event SPY continued its ascent and remained range-bound around $210-212.  I entered into a long calendar spread by:
  • buying SPY July (17) 210 puts
  • selling SPY June (10) 210 puts
The spread cost me $2.45.  It would more than offset any straddle losses if SPY settled at $210 around expiry, however the hedge would lose its efficacy above $213 or so.  Over the first few days, the spread became profitable.  Calendar spreads are generally very slow moving (ie. they make/lose money very slowly).  However, things accelerate as you get closer to the short expiry.  Both theta and gamma increase.  Theta represents time decay.  A long calendar spread is +theta therefore the spread makes money with the passage of time.  Gamma represents the change in delta as the underlying moves.  A long calendar spread is -gamma and risks losing money if the underlying starts to move rapidly in any direction.  Because of gamma risk, I typically don't hold calendars until expiry of the short option, however in this instance I elected to roll the dice.

The short side of my spread expired on Friday, June 10.  SPY closed on Thursday at about $212 and gapped down on the Friday open.  SPY meandered around $210 and was pinned to my short strike--the absolute perfect scenario.  I closed the calendar mid-day with a credit of $3.69 for a net profit of $3.69 - $2.45 = $1.24 or about 50% of my initial debit.  A calendar spread home run!  Near market close, the spread actually traded at $4.00, however I was still more than pleased with my 50% profit.  What helped the position even more was the expansion of volatility.  A calendar spread is the only directionless strategy which benefits from volatility expansion, however this is outside the scope of this article.

The calendar spread win more than offset all of my straddle losses for the month (and then some!) which was the objective of this trade.  Many find the strategy boring but for whatever reason I have an affinity to this position.  Since calendar spreads benefit from increasing volatility, it's a strategy that should be considered in low volatility environments like we generally have today.  

Standard June options expire next week so I'll have some more postmortems to share as it'll be a busy week of closing positions.  In particular is my GOOGL call calendar spread and my MCD calendar/diagonal.  The MCD trade has been a grind with a ton of adjustments which I'll recap next weekend.


Monday 6 June 2016

June 6 - Bunch of rolls

Today was a roll day.

X
X had a nice move up today.  I closed the June 14.5 puts by buying back at $0.28 for a nice profit of $0.71 (initial debit of $0.99).  I rolled up and out by selling July 15 puts for $1.05.  I'm still fairly bullish on X which is in line with my bearish view on the USD.

MCD
Rolled down the short June 130 puts to to 122.  My weighted-average short strikes in June is $122.90.  Even though this number is above the current stock price, my overall delta is still negative (for now).  Delta will flip once we get closer to expiry if we stay here.  I'd just like MCD to meander between $122-123 here on in with a bias to the downside since I essentially have a bunch of diagonals with my long July 130 puts.  MCD has been a disaster the past month or so for me, but if we can stay at this level for the next two weeks, all will be good.

SPY
I had a June(10) short straddle at 203...ouch!  I rolled into an inverted strangle by selling 210 puts while taking off the 203 puts for a cup of coffee (Tim's--not Starbucks).  I'm still -delta on the SPY, but figure this run has to end some time...doesn't it?  Doesn't it? :)  At least my core portfolio is doing well!

GOOGL
Didn't do anything with GOOGL today, but it hasn't looked good the past few trading days.  I'm holding the ripcord and may have to pull tomorrow.

Saturday 4 June 2016

June 4 - Technical analysis and other mumbo jumbo

I'm not a technician by any stretch of the imagination, but I decided to open up some positions based on my technical analysis on some underlyings.  

X - Short put
On May 26, I sold June(17) 14.50 puts on US Steel (X).  IV is fairly high in this underlying which allowed me to credit $0.99 per put with X trading at $14.70.  Not a bad credit for 22 days to expiration (DTE) with the puts slightly out-of-the-money.
The +DI was converging up into the -DI and looks like it will overtake it.  I probably got into this trade a little early and should have waited for confirmation.  However, time is on my side on this trade and I wanted to put this on while IV was still high.  Since the trade, X has moved up about 60 cents while IV has drifted lower.  The puts are now $0.47 and I'll continue to monitor the DIs.  If the DIs continue to oscillate as they did in February or if the +DI continues up, I'll hold on to the position.  If -DI strengthens, I'll have to think about exiting.

GOOGL - Long call spread
In a similar vein, I bought a long July(17) 710/730 call spread in GOOGL for an initial debit of $10.30 on May 23.  It has been a good couple of weeks since (spread is now a little over $15), but the ADX/DI technicals appear to be weakening.  Both strikes are in the money, so theta is now positive so I'll try to be patient to let this trade play out.  But if the DIs reconverge, I'll look to close the position.  

Adjustments
On the other hand, MCD has been struggling and I don't see much upside over the next couple of weeks.  As a result, I rolled down my short some of my MCD June 130 puts to 122.  I have 50 long lots of July 130 puts with short June(17) puts of now 130x15, 125x10 and 122x25.



Other new positions

Long FB diagonal:
  • Bought July(15) 115 call
  • Sold June(17) 118 call
  • $3.28 debit
Long AAPL diagonal:
  • Bought July(15) 95 put
  • Sold June(17) 92.50 put
  • $2.11 debit
Long AAPL calendar:
  • Bought July(15) 97.5 call
  • Sold June(17) 97.5 call
  • $1.16 debit
Long SPY calendar
  • Bought July(15) 210 put
  • Sold June(10) 210 put
  • $2.45 debit