AXJO | | Current Vale 7,083 |
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September 16th. 2021 | | |
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Below 6,800 | AXJO has fallen more than -4% | Buy the September 7,100 Put |
6,800 – 7,083 | AXJO loss between -4% and 0% | Keep money in your pocket |
7,083 – 7,300 | AXJO gain between 0% and 3% | Buy the ETF today |
Above 7,300 | AXJO has gone up more than +3% | Buy the September7,100 Call Option |
StriekIf you are going to regularly sell options I would strongly consider swapping brokers because Australian brokers are very expensive. $35 a trade (CommSec?) Plus another $35 on assignment will kill your profit profile. I use Interactive Brokers. It's about $1 a trade on options and no assignment fee. They aren't chess sponsored and have other pros/cons though so do your research.
The obvious risk to selling long covered calls is upside risk. You take on all the downside risk but limit your profit potential on the upside. What is your expectations for the performance of the underlying, do you buy back in, what's your opportunity cost?
I am personally long on FMG options and looking to acquire more.
Hi,The Trade.
Sell 10 contracts (1,000 shares) of a 17th June FMG call with XP of $24.76. The XP is 7.8% above current SP as on 7th May. 1,000 shares from my account will be ‘held’ as collateral for the trade. The premium is $0.470 ($470) per contract and the contract fee is $35. Total received premium will be $470 - $35 = $435.
Cutz,Hi,
Sounds like an ok strategy to begin with.
Not much to say about covered calls, you can roll down into a correction but risk getting assigned in the event of a snap back.
Biggest downside to the covered call strategy is missing out on upside, you seem well aware of that, you're shorting less call options than total stock holding therefore you should be able to trade your way out of assignment in the event of a rally.
FMG stock appears to have good trading volume which should translate into less liquidity risk in the options which means getting filled around the midpoint, watch out for those series which have low volumes on the underlying, market markers will tend to pull you towards their side in order to get a fill.
StriekHas this mornings price action changed your mind at all? Its very likely if you had sold Friday you would be regretting it today (I would think) when the underlying has almost met your strike price (with a month to go). I regret not buying more call options last week!
I had sold covered calls on A2M... I knew in my head I should cut the stock weeks ago but went with my heart... the covered calls were a compromise to reduce the cost base. Now I have sold out at a loss and purhased puts, haha.
Hello.On volatility, I am unable to find any historical 'implied' volatility for ASX shares anywhere. If anyone knows where I can get this I would appreciate it.
Thanks Cutz,Hello.
IB TWS shows it in chart form, just check the option implied volatility box when opening up a stock chart.
To see it in webiress/viewpoint launch a stock chart, append "IV" to the ticker code, example BHPIV.ASX
Regards.
@Sharkmanbuying stock + selling calls is synthetically equivalent to selling puts. in fact when trading thru IB it's actually slightly cheaper to sell puts and have the stock put to you vs buying the stock outright, particularly for dollar expensive stocks like CBA. you only pay 27.5c a contract when assigned, you DON'T pay the 0.08% brokerage. to buy 1000 units outright at today's prices would cost about $77 brokerage, to get those same 1000 units put to you only costs $2.75 as an assignment fee. it's not much individually, but it adds up if you frequently utilise dividend stripping tactics.
CBA doesn't go ex-div until Aug. if the objective is to generate income from both premium + dividend, an alternative way to go about it would be to sell Jun puts. if those expire OTM, then sell Jul puts. if either of those are ITM, you can let them get assigned and take delivery prior to the dividend. if they both expire OTM, then buying outright might become a consideration at that point to ensure you have the stock before it goes ex-div.
if you're going to sell Aug covered calls, watch out for early exercise especially the day before ex-div day - the div can and will get called out from under you if it's ITM and the dividend is larger than the remaining extrinsic. one way to avoid that is to sell the *european* calls (in IB the european chains are denoted by CBA.E instead of CBA) which can't be exercised early, but the premium will of course reflect that. the downside is that you don't always get good fills on the europeans as they are way less liquid. the american options generally get better fills, but you have to pay close attention to the market the day before ex-div and be prepared to buy them back or roll up & out if it looks like it could get exercised early.
Hello,As a novice in options this is great. I’m just a bit scared of selling puts without holding the underlying shares at the moment but my confidence will grow in time.
Hello,
In simple terms a covered call carries exactly the same risk profile as a naked put.
Why are you more comfortable buying stock and shorting calls over just shorting puts ?
Because as an amateur I feel scared ‘selling’ something I don’t own, plus generally I am ‘long’ on CBA.Hello,
In simple terms a covered call carries exactly the same risk profile as a naked put.
Why are you more comfortable buying stock and shorting calls over just shorting puts ?
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