The Weeks/Months Ahead: DCA Using Short Puts/Short Put VerticalsNow that I'm retired (whee!) and in the process of rolling my employment-based retirement account into my IRA, I need to think about deploying that buying power somewhere.
Traditionally, I've sold primarily short puts in broad market as a way to emulate dollar cost averaging (DCA) into the broad market versus just buying shares and, if assigned stock, proceeded to sell call against at or above my cost basis. I'm pretty much going to continue doing that here, along with getting into some high implied volatility exchange-traded funds (e.g., ARKK, See Post Below). SPY, after all, isn't paying all that richly here, with the September 17th 400 short put paying around 4.00 or 1.01% (5.42% annualized) in premium as a function of notional risk, which isn't exactly going to rock anyone's world. In comparison, the ARKK September 17th 102 short put is paying around 1.99 or 1.99% (10.68% annualized) in premium as a function of notional risk.
Naturally, that September 17th 400 short put is around the 17 delta, so I could conceivably sell closer to at-the-money to force a bigger credit, but my basic philosophy is one of consistency: Sell the 16 delta. It pays what it pays. Sometimes it will pay more. Sometimes less. We're just in a "less" phase at the moment. Additionally, I'm at a stage where I'm less concerned about ROC %-age and more concerned about "Is this making enough in pure dollar and cents terms?" If 5.42% annualized does the trick, well, then, I'm totally fine with that, even if it isn't the kind of returns people want to see out of their retirement portfolios.
Granted, SPY now qualifies as a "large instrument," so short putting it isn't going to be an option or desirable for the vast majority of individuals, particularly when the ROC %-age isn't all that sexy.
Enter the short put vertical, which is easier on the eyes from a buying power perspective and has better ROC %-age metrics. Slap a long September 17th 395 long put on that 400 shortie, and -- voila -- you get a defined risk setup costing 4.53 ($453) to put on with an ROC of 10.4% at max (55.8% annualized). Too weenie? Go SPX 50-wide, with the September 17th 3950/4000 paying 4.50 at the mid on a buying power effect of 45.50 (9.89% ROC at max).
Up to this point, I've been doing a mix of both, reserving the 50-wides for <45 days' duration (See Post Below for one of my standard 50-wide SPX spreads) and the short puts for longer. In the very small account I've been posting trades for (See Post Below, QQQ August 13th 327.5/332.5 Short Put Vertical), well, I'm pretty much relegated to spreads, since there's little buying power available to do much else.
From a trade management standpoint, I've been doing the following:
(a) Rolling the broad market short puts at 50% max and, if assigned, taking on shares and selling call against at the strike at which my short put was. For underlyings that are less liquid, I lean toward taking them off on approaching worthless, even though this generally ties up buying power for longer.
On occasion, I've been rolling the short puts up intraexpiry, (See Post Below, rolling the December 240 to the December 297); on others, out in time. (See Post Below, rolling the August 20th 381 to the September 30th 378), with where I roll primarily having to do with what the 16 delta strike is paying. If it's paying <1% intraexpiry, I've generally been rolling out.
(b) Taking profit on the short put verticals at 50% max, loss at 2 x credit received. One of the reasons I just take loss on these is that rolling a spread -- particularly one that is in the money -- can be pesky if your aim is to receive a credit on roll. If it's in the red, you're going to realize a loss on roll anyway, so you're generally better off just taking it and then reentering with a higher probability setup. Naturally, there are some potentially subjective elements to that decision-making process (e.g., what is the probability of profit at that juncture in time, how much time is left in the setup, how do the strikes set up relative to support/resistance, etc.), but I like to stay mechanical and taking loss at a given metric makes for a "clean" decisional process.
(c) On approach of lengthy vacations, my tendency has been to flatten out of the spreads, since they're not nearly as "set and forget" as the short puts. Since I have to be fine with getting assigned shares on any given put contract, I can walk away for lengthy periods of time, after which one of two things happen: (1) the contract expires worthless; or (2) I'm assigned shares. Naturally, if I'm away and get assigned and don't cover immediately, I'm potentially out of some short call premium, but it's not the end of the world. You do not want to walk away from a spread that could end up in the money and convergent on max loss, particularly if you're not prepared for the buying power effect of being assigned shares on the short option leg of the spread. There isn't assignment risk with SPX options (they're cash settled, after all), but still, waiting to take something off that is convergent on max loss is no bueno.
As usual, we'll see how things go. 2020 was fantastic for anything "bullish assumption," with 2021 being more of the same through the first half of the year. Naturally, I don't need broad market to continue ripping higher to make money with these basic strategies; sideways will also do.
Shortputverticals
GDX (GOLD MINERS ETF) -- A GOOD PLACE TO ADD/INITIATE LONG HEREWith gold hovering just north of 1250, having lost a good deal of luster to pesky Greenback strength, this is possibly a good place to add into current bullish gold positions and/or initiate one here.*
22 and change, after all, appears to be fairly long-term support for GDX, so I would look to add bullish positions via naked short puts or short put verticals at the 21 strike or below (the Dec 16th 21 pays .80/contract). The alternative is to wait to see if /GC 1250 holds up here or gives up the ghost on the increased probability of a Dec rate hike or the currently increased likelihood that the US Presidential election result will be in Clinton's favor, which is generally viewed as market bullish/risk off.
* -- I'm currently in a GDX covered call with a per share cost basis around 24/share and really only want to add position if it dramatically improves that cost basis. Not sure whether being put shares at 21 would do that, so I may thumb twiddle to see if we get something around 17.50. You never know, really ... .
XOP -- BROADLY RANGEBOUND BETWEEN 32 AND 41With November OPEC talks designed ostensibly to hammer out proposed output cuts being the binary event for oil in the near-term, I'm looking to either (a) add to bullish positions in petro if those talks fail to result in meaningful cuts (I'm skeptical); or (b) hang on to my current bullish petro plays for the ride higher if those talks actually result in something. That "something" could run the gambit from a freeze at current levels, to modest output cuts, to deep production cuts. Previously, most of these talks have resulted in failure, so my money's on nothing really meaningful occurring that puts a major dent in the current glut. That being said, even a modest, non-glut relieving cut could signal to the market that there has been "some progress" over previous meetings, driving the price higher.
XOP has been broadly rangebound over the past several weeks between 32 and 41, so I'm looking to add to bullish positions via naked short puts or short put verticals at the 32 strike or below. Currently, XOP Dec 16th 32 short puts will bring in .50 ($50)/contract at the mid price; naturally, if price retraces somewhat on poor OPEC output cut talk, those strikes will increase in value, so patience is everything ... . If price drives higher, I'll just hang onto the long petro positions I have on now and wait for a better opportunity to add to or reestablish bullish oil positions.
TRADES TO MAKE IN PREPARATION FOR A BREMAIN RESULTI don't trade news, but this is an event whose outcome I think is now relatively certain (Bremain) such that it might be worthwhile to take a small position to take advantage of the relief rally that will occur if that is the result. Naturally, I could be totally wrong on the result, but the probability of a Bremain vote is currently higher than a Brexit vote, if the bookies have anything to contribute to the discussion ... .
In any event, here are the ideas, roughly in the order of my preference:
1. Gold Short. Gold is again butting its head against the psychological 1300 resistance level here, and its been sideways between 1200 and 1300 since mid-February, having previously unsuccessfully challenged the +1300 mark in early May before giving up the ghost all the way back to 1200 by May's end. A meaningful relief rally in equities on a Bremain vote may guide the precious metal lower.
Because I'm currently in a GLD position, I've chosen to close the put wing sides of my GLD iron condors, leaving short call verticals in place to take advantage of any downturn. If the short call verticals don't hit max profit outright, I'll merely wait and buy the dip by adding the short put wings back in if there's a significant drop in price.
Trades: GLD or GDX short call verticals above current resistance.
2. TLT short/TBT long. Traders have fled risk-on assets a little bit here in advance of the referendum. As with gold, they've sought out safe havens such as treasuries, driving TLT to within 5% of its 52-week high and TBT to within 5% of its 52 week low (TBT is the inverse of TLT).
Trades: TLT short call verticals above current resistance; TBT short put verticals below current support.
3. European Indices/Index ETF's Long. Naturally, you can play US equities indices long here, but since this is uniquely a European "thing," I would think you'd want to put plays in European indices or index ETF's to get the full brunt of the relief rally and not the spillover that will occur into US markets. Although the Euro index ETF's have already experienced a bit of resurgence off of lows, they may have further upside once the referendum is over.
Trades: EFA short put verticals below current support.
4. Cable Pairs. GBPUSD is the most obvious choice for a bullish assumption, although it's already rallied from the 6/16 low by 200+ pips, although it may have another 350 pips to the upside in it (the 5/26 high).
In all of these instances, I would trade small and, if trading the underlyings directly, I would common sense in setting stops. Keep in mind that all these assets are likely to move "in tandem," so I would pick one to trade and not put on trades in the others. The reason my preference is for a gold trade is that (a) it's a mover; (b) it's already at resistance; and (c) well, to be honest, I've already got a GLD trade on that I can use to take advantage of the movement.