The Commodity Trading Forum
is a presentation of
Free
Commodity Chart Service

Commodity Menu
My Charts Menu
Intraday Quotes
Stock Market Data
News for Traders
Weather Maps
Commodity Brokers
Premium Resources
Learning Center
Short Course
Glossary
Trader's Books
Trader's Forum
Live Chat

TFC Home
F.A.Q.
Suggestion Box
Advertising Info.

[ Post Response ] [ Return to Index ] [ Read Prev Msg ] [ Read Next Msg ]

Commodity Trading Discussion Forum

Delta Neutral Trading with a Straddle

Posted By: USCoralSea
Date: Tuesday, 3 November 2009, at 5:20 a.m.

Real-World Trading: Delta Neutral Trading with a Straddle, Part VII

Jody Osborne, Optionetics.com
November 2, 2009

For the past six weeks, we have been discussing a straddle strategy. We chose to use ExxonMobil (XOM) in a mock trade using a straddle so that we could see how the week-to-week movement in the underlying impacts a straddle trade. We have some keys that we are looking for when trading a straddle, as follows:

Find a stock that has low IV compared with historical volatility.
Find a stock that has been in a tight trading range.
Find a stock that has pending news in the next 4 to 8 weeks.
Allow at least 30-days until expiration after the expected news event.
Know your breakeven points so that appropriate exit strategies can be set up.
XOM fit this criterion with the stock set to announce earnings on Oct. 29 and the daily chart in a triangle formation. IV was low historically speaking and this is a key when trading a straddle or strangle. We did see some volatility in XOM shares, but the net movement needed to make solid profits never developed, though the mock trade did end with a mild profit if traders exited the session before earnings were announced. Below is the week to week data for this straddle trade:

Sept. 28, 2009
XOM @ 69.59
Buy 1 Jan10 70 call @ 3.10 [IV=22.7]
Buy 1 Jan10 70 put @ 3.95 [IV=23.7]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Profit Expectation = $350

Oct. 2, 2009
XOM @ 66.58
1 Jan10 70 call @ 2.00 [IV=24.4]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 5.85 [IV=25.7]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit = $80

Oct. 9, 2009
XOM @ 69.27
1 Jan10 70 call @ 2.70 [IV=22.1]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 3.90 [IV=23.6]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit/ Loss = ($45)

Oct. 16, 2009
XOM @ 73.12
1 Jan10 70 call @ 4.53 [IV=20.3]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 1.84 [IV=21.6]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit/Loss = ($68)

Oct. 23, 2009
XOM @ 73.57
1 Jan10 70 call @ 5.18 [IV=23.8]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 2.01 [IV=25.0]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit/Loss = $14

Pre-earnings announcement
Oct. 28, 2009
XOM @ 73.84
1 Jan10 70 call @ 5.48 [IV=25.3]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 2.03 [IV=26.7]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit/Loss = $46

We did see an increase in IV on XOM options heading into its earnings release. This helped the stock turn profitable despite a move that didn't match our expectations. The data above is using the closing data for XOM on Oct. 28 with XOM announcing earnings before the open on Oct. 29. Intraday on the 28th, XOM shares hits a high of $74.96, so a better profit could have been achieved.

Post-earnings announcement
Oct. 29, 2009
XOM @ 73.96
1 Jan10 70 call @ 5.20 [IV=22.4]
1 Jan10 70 put @ 1.77 [IV=25.1]
Max Risk = $705
Max Profit = Unlimited
Downside Breakeven = 62.95
Upside Breakeven = 77.05
Current Profit/Loss = ($8)

Interestingly, XOM reported disappointing earnings the morning of the 29th, yet the stock added 12-cents on the session. However, the resulting decline in IV left the trade with a loss of $8 compared with the $46 gain seen before the announcement. On Oct. 30, XOM shares fell $2.29 to $71.67, which sent IV higher, yet the trade still would have a loss of $10.

The nice thing about a straddle or strangle is the fact losses can be limited by having proper exit strategies. We didn't quite get what we wanted out of the XOM straddle, yet a mild gain was achieved. If nothing else, I hope readers learned from this mock trade how important implied volatility is to a straddle. This is often overlooked or thrown aside by new traders until they learn the hard way how IV can impact the value of a trade.

We will begin a new strategy next week, so please let me know what strategies you would like to see discussed on my ofrum, which you may access through the homepage at Optionetics.com.

Jody Osborne
Senior Writer & Options Strategist
Optionetics.com ~ Your Options Education Site


If you want to print this message, you might have better results, and waste less paper if you print this printer friendly page.


Password:

 

Post Response

Your Name:
E-Mail Address:
Subject:
Message:

If you'd like to include a link to another page with your message,
please provide both the URL address and the title of the page:

Optional Link URL:
Optional Link Title:

If you'd like to have the option of deleting your post later,
please provide a password (CASE SENSITIVE!):

Password:
Save Password: Yes No

 

 

[ Post Response ] [ Return to Index ] [ Read Prev Msg ] [ Read Next Msg ]

Commodity Trading Discussion Forum is maintained by Mike Ritchie with WebBBS 5.00.

To report abuse of this Forum, please send email to: admin1@tradingcharts.com