Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Options Tuesday: Selling Cash-Secured Puts
Now that option implied volatility has soared, we can talk about selling puts. Not naked puts, but cash-secured puts. You cash-secure your puts by putting aside the cash you would have to pay to buy the stock, if you got assigned your short puts. 50% of the stock price, true margin, will do. You can put the cash in a money market fund that's accessible, but you must carve that cash out of your money pile and set it aside.
Cash-securing your puts keeps the focus on trading stocks, rather than trading options. Your profit/loss is calculated against the total investment of 50%-margined stock minus the income you receive from selling puts. When you think about it, it's the same as a buy/write, except all your potential profit is in the option rather than in a combination of stock and option profit in the buy/write.
In fact, the profit/loss graph of the cash-secured put is the same as the buy/write of the same issue and strike. Now, which stocks would you commit to a buy/write now? We like to look for extremely oversold sectors that haven't been the focus of the downturn. We like the retail stocks -- which have been hurt as bad as the broker/dealers -- as buy/writes or cash-secured short puts.
Looking ahead, we have Thanksgiving and Christmas to surprise on the upside. Once the market gets rallying in the fourth quarter, people will start spending again. Right now, Morgan-Stanley Retail (MVR) is at the bottom of Zone 1 on a 90-day basis, and at the top of Zone 1 on a 10-day basis. It may go lower this week, considering the momentum. But it's OK to start establishing buy/writes or selling cash-secured puts.
Here's the trick to selling puts: You need to allow enough time for the issue to recover, but you don't want to have to wait too long to make your nut. Two or three months is about right. One month isn't enough time for the oversold issue to recover. Four months means your premium doesn't start wasting away for 12 weeks or so. Say the issue is unchanged for one year -- you would make more money selling four three-month options than you would selling three four-month options.
We like selling three-month options, particularly once the market's found a bottom. That means November or December expiration. We still think this will end in a gigantic blow-off selling day, maybe to include a violent upside reversal. Maybe the blow-off will cover a few days. We'll know it when we see it. We're looking for it.
Cash-securing your puts keeps the focus on trading stocks, rather than trading options. Your profit/loss is calculated against the total investment of 50%-margined stock minus the income you receive from selling puts. When you think about it, it's the same as a buy/write, except all your potential profit is in the option rather than in a combination of stock and option profit in the buy/write.
In fact, the profit/loss graph of the cash-secured put is the same as the buy/write of the same issue and strike. Now, which stocks would you commit to a buy/write now? We like to look for extremely oversold sectors that haven't been the focus of the downturn. We like the retail stocks -- which have been hurt as bad as the broker/dealers -- as buy/writes or cash-secured short puts.
Looking ahead, we have Thanksgiving and Christmas to surprise on the upside. Once the market gets rallying in the fourth quarter, people will start spending again. Right now, Morgan-Stanley Retail (MVR) is at the bottom of Zone 1 on a 90-day basis, and at the top of Zone 1 on a 10-day basis. It may go lower this week, considering the momentum. But it's OK to start establishing buy/writes or selling cash-secured puts.
Here's the trick to selling puts: You need to allow enough time for the issue to recover, but you don't want to have to wait too long to make your nut. Two or three months is about right. One month isn't enough time for the oversold issue to recover. Four months means your premium doesn't start wasting away for 12 weeks or so. Say the issue is unchanged for one year -- you would make more money selling four three-month options than you would selling three four-month options.
We like selling three-month options, particularly once the market's found a bottom. That means November or December expiration. We still think this will end in a gigantic blow-off selling day, maybe to include a violent upside reversal. Maybe the blow-off will cover a few days. We'll know it when we see it. We're looking for it.
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