- Joined
- 10 August 2008
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A couple of free resources:
1/ If you click on my website link below, there is a free download for Charles Cottle's book "Coulda Woulda Shoulda".
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Thanks for the offer,but can't see it anywhere on your website
Hi Bro,
I think Wayne's post is 8 years old, if you really want a copy, amazon may still sell it.
covered call of course, thinking that everyone starts that way.
pretty much... and then we get served an assignment on our first covered call, and come to the realisation that it ain't share rental
Never ever considered it to be a rental of any kind, i consider it a straight out punt..i feel a bit like a bookie, i offered a bet and someone took it, and while i very much doubt i will be assigned on this trade im 100% prepared to do so and accept the 35% profit on the sale of the stock.
Them's the brakes i guess. :dunno:
why do you very much doubt you will be assigned? because it's really way OTM? what are you referring to when you say you've made $34, is that what IB is saying the position PNL is? or are you referring to the premium collected? please don't tell us you sold 20 contracts on something at 0.02, ie. $40 premium - $6 brokerage
fair enough. if it's an ASX ETO then 18% OTM is really far OTM for just about anything on there so yeah very little chance it will be assigned
IB will have taken the commish out before they put the proceeds into your available cash balance. i was kinda assuming you'd done an ASX ETO trade so 20 contracts @ 0.02 would get $40 net premium, commish is 30c / contract = $6 so that would leave $34 of proceeds.
i don't know if i'd consider myself a bookie when i sell options - whether you buy or sell, i'd say it's really the MM who's the bookie, not us, both bookies and MMs are the ones who are sitting on both sides of the bet and they'll take a bit of juice each time. if it's ASX ETOs you're trading, there will come a time when you will rage against the MMs soon enough...
I think i may have already experienced a bit of MM frustration...i first wrote the calls on Monday at the last quoted price and was surprised to see the order unfilled the next day, i cancelled that and tried an at market order and was again surprised to see that not filled...i thought i must of done something wrong (IB noob) and so cancelled that after it sat there unfilled for an hour or so.
Next day went half a cent under, unfilled and then today i got aggressive and went a full cent under the quote and was filled.
Just a point, you don't have to wait to be assigned. If it goes ITM and you don't want to sell the stock for any reason (say to avoid a CGT event), you can buy the call back.
There are other reasons not to wait til expiry. On WTFOTM calls (and it stays WTFOTM) you'll get most of your decay well before expiry. No point holding a nearly worthless short (risk for no reward) when you can close it out and re-write for more premium.
I think i may have already experienced a bit of MM frustration...i first wrote the calls on Monday at the last quoted price and was surprised to see the order unfilled the next day, i cancelled that and tried an at market order and was again surprised to see that not filled...i thought i must of done something wrong (IB noob) and so cancelled that after it sat there unfilled for an hour or so.
Next day went half a cent under, unfilled and then today i got aggressive and went a full cent under the quote and was filled.
There are other reasons not to wait til expiry. On WTFOTM calls (and it stays WTFOTM) you'll get most of your decay well before expiry. No point holding a nearly worthless short (risk for no reward) when you can close it out and re-write for more premium.
were you looking at the last quoted bid/ask, or the last traded price?
the last traded price can easily be completely different from what the option would trade at now, particularly for illiquid contracts (like the way OTM calls you've mentioned) because that transaction could have been done days ago and since then the underlying has probably moved.
even the last quoted bid/ask probably won't be an accurate reflection of what the price would be in order to transact now as the underlying will have moved from yesterday to today, there'll be an extra day of decay etc.
i think what you need to do is "express an interest" in the contracts, and you do that by putting in a bid or offer that's way out of market and in your favour, eg. if you estimate the "fair value" of the contracts would be around 0.10, based off the IV that the contracts of the same underlying & expiry that do have an NBBO are trading off, then stick in an offer of 0.20. that way you don't risk getting insta-filled at a suboptimal price (as you don't really know what the spread is at this point), but by sticking in an order, you're signalling that you're interested in trading these contracts, so the MMs are supposed to be obliged (as part of their licence - they're supposed to be providing liquidity after all) to quote a spread for these contracts (it will probably be a stupidly wide spread though). once they do you can then modify your order and start trying to work the spread to get a fill.
Good point, i was looking at expiry as the end game but time decay works in the call writers favour i guess, as long as the option stays way OTM.....ok so to close it out i simply buy the same call in the same quantity?
Ok ill give that a try...a different mind set to stocks seems to be needed...so many things to consider.
not as easy as it sounds on the ASX though. if you let it get too far ITM or it's too close to expiry, the MMs tend to play hardball with you. i've already gone into a rant in some other thread about how i had NAB 30-28.50 put spreads a couple of months ago, wanted to take the whole spread off when the stock was about 28 a few days to expiry, only to see a bid/ask of 1.98/2.26 when i was trying to sell back the 30 puts, and didn't even get filled at 2.05. if you had something similar in reverse - eg. sold NAB covered calls at 28 and the stock rose to 30. you could be faced with a similar bid/ask, if they really played hardball and made you cross the whole spread, that's 0.85% of the stock price in extrinsic that you'd have to pay - for something that would have to have a delta of over 90! ouch!
OTOH it's not always a reflex decision to close it out as soon as the underlying gets close to your strike, because that's when you start to get decent theta. so it's a bit of a tightrope act as you can't let it get too far ITM (unless you're happy to just take the assignment come what may), but in order to collect good theta you probably do need to be willing to let it get a little bit ITM within the option's lifetime due to the course of normal market fluctuation.
would you be inclined to write WTFOTM covered calls in the first place though wayne? the decay is faster early on in the options life for way OTM contracts, but that decay is still going to be chicken feed seeing as the net premium itself will be chicken feed at such a low delta. plus the IV is usually pathetically low at the high strikes (relative to IVs at the lower strikes for the same underlying and expiry), and commish takes a larger hit % wise out of the premium collected, all of which dissuade me from selling really low delta covered calls.
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