Sunday, August 9, 2009

I Can See Clearly Now

A fellow trader and reader of this blog e-mailed me a question late last week and he got me thinking. In a nutshell, the trader was wondering "what am I doing wrong?", needless to say, this month got me wondering the exact same thing, as two of my positions failed.

So, I decided to put everything in perspective, do some search to try and figure out what is going on? Why are these non-directional trades taking such beating? Is the market not appropriate for certain strategies? If yes, why?

I have a spreadsheet I created late 2007 when I started trading iron condors. I called it the "deviation study". This study is simple and it helps me to answer the following question: for the past 10 years, how many times did RUT stay within a certain range for X trading sessions?

The results are displayed in a scatter chart, with the red lines indicating the 2 standard deviation range for the data and the blue lines indicating my proposed position.

See the picture bellow:

(A) Enter the Index and the number of trading sessions for the study
(B) Enter the current price and where the upper and lower strikes are
(C) Each yellow dot on the chart is a how much RUT moved (in percentage) for the number of days during the time period.

OK, now let's look at this study and put things in perspective: Prior to 2008, there were two cycles where you can clearly see the outliers going beyond the 10% range. These were times of high "uncertainty" and therefore higher volatility and stronger price swings.

Notice how things settled down, and the market was quite nice from 2005 till 2007. A perfect environment for trading non-directional strategies.

Now, compare the picture above with the most current picture, which includes 2008 and 2009. Notice how the outliers are much further away than during the previous cycles of "uncertainty".



As Jimmy Cliff's sound would say: "I can see clearly now the rain is gone... I can see all obstacles in my way"..

We are indeed trading in an environment of much higher uncertainty and stronger price swings. This is making it much more difficult for certain non-directional trading strategies.

What should we do as non-directional traders? Give up? Absolutelly NOT! The storm is what makes the sailor! Once we figure out how to navigate such amazing environment, we can set ourselves up to trade during any time period, and specially when things settle down as they did back in 2005.

I hope this helps. If anything, it is helping me to stay in the game and write off my current losses to sailing the storm. The boat may get damaged, but as long as I manage to trade smaller, I know I can survive this period and come out in a great position in the other end.

Cheers!
Gustavo

Friday, August 7, 2009

08/07 Daily Summary

Not much to say, the markets rallied after better than expected unemployment numbers. I'm still on a couple of the AUG trades and not so sure how I'll approach the delta-neutral strategies from now on. I'm considering reducing the type of strategies I use and focusing on only a few strategies from now untill the end of the year.


MNX Iron Butterfly continued to improve Today, so did the IBM Calendar, I'm getting more optmistic about the future on these two positions. Let's see what is in store for us next week.


Position's details:
08/07 IBM Calendar
08/07 MNX Iron Butterfly

Cheers!
Enjoy!

08/07 IBM Calendar

IBM moved higher Today, it moved over 1 standard deviation. The move wasn't too bad on the position, we had already added the 120 Calendar, and that gives up some coverage to the up-side. Now let's goo through the weekend and see what next week reserves for us.

08/07 MNX Iron Butterfly

MNX moved higher once again Today, fortunatelly the Volatility came down this time, this gave the trade a nice break and the move up wasn't that damaging to the position. Granted, we're approaching the high-theta time-frame, so the longer we can stay in the game from now on, the more likely we'll end up profitable.

I did cut the deltas at the closing time. It was approaching -50, so I added another SEP long CALL contract to smooth things out a bit. Now it is only a matter of collecting the time decay over the weekend.


Thursday, August 6, 2009

08/06 Daily Summary

I really like having only a couple of positions to look after. I'm very likely to reduze the complexity of my option trading portfolio next month. Still something I'll reflect and decide over the weekend.

Today's retreat was once again welcome. Now we may be at a tipping point on the MNX, if we stay around these levels the position will be in great shape, otherwise I'll have to start managing the down-side. One way or another, the trade is still there, which is an attestment of its flexibility.

The IBM Calendar is working fine, it would be perfect if we hadn't triggered the 120 calendar, but it doesn't need to be perfect, as long as it makes some money, right?

Position's Details:
08/06 IBM Calendar
08/06 MNX Iron Butterfly

08/06 IBM Calendar

IBM is back to where it started. I now must manage the double calendar, if we stay around, the 120 calendar won't hurt as much, if we start going south towards the 115 area, then the 120 needs to come off.. So far I'm only using alerts. I'll be available Tomorrow to take any action if needed.

Position's History:
08/05 IBM Calendar
08/04 IBM Calendar
08/03 IBM Calendar
07/31 IBM Calendar
07/30 IBM Calendar
07/29 IBM Calendar
07/28 IBM Calendar
07/27 IBM Calendar *New*

Return to home

08/06 MNX Iron Butterfly

We have retreated Today, now the question is: are we pulling back or crashing down?! Who knows.. I've set up a few contingent orders to protect on the down-side, in any event, I'm in a great point as far as theta is concerned, so if we oscilate around these levels the trade will be in a great shape!