- Joined
- 10 August 2008
- Posts
- 2,136
- Reactions
- 315
OK. Wouldn't you be better off just buying the put initially? If the market goes down, you can sell it again to profit. If the market goes up, it expires worthless. With the synthetic short, if the market goes up, you've made a loss relative to that price increase.
Interesting, I didn't know even a limited number of sectors were available. Thanks Zaxon, where did you come across this type of information ? I don't actually trade futures, except I do have some indices listed with a Forex broker.
https://www.asx.com.au/prices/asx-futures.htmThanks Zaxon, where did you come across this type of information ? I don't actually trade futures, except I do have some indices listed with a Forex broker.
OK thanks, Just have to find which brokers offer these instruments to retail investors/traders like us...https://www.asx.com.au/prices/asx-futures.htm
There's also futures for interest rates: bond yields, bank bills, etc. Commodities such as Wheat, barely, electricity, gas, etc.
Thanks rnr, yes ASX warrants are not some broker manufactured instrument like CFD's offered by market makers. The warrant prices can be checked on the ASX website.Hi Zaxon,
The link below will probably answer your questions in relation to Warrants listed on the ASX.
Warrants FAQs - ASX
Cheers,
Rob
Yes, you've summarised the use of these instruments well.So we cover all our bases, with CFDs, in addition to your counterparty typically being your broker and all the games that entails, there are holding fees for holding CFDs overnight. I'd imagine if you wanted to hold CFDs for a year, it would be crazy exercise.
View attachment 94639
Plus, you're required to hold a decent cash balance at all times and add more money whenever they demand it.
View attachment 94640
When we compare that to options and warrants, nobody is going to demand more money. You only pay if you choose to exercise/buy/sell, which is under your control.
However, the value of options & warrants do decay over time, so they're not perfect instruments either.
Yes, you've summarised the use of these instruments well.
Neither of them should be used for long term investing type of use. Especially Options and warrants decay in time and lose value at an increased rate as it approaches expiry, so keep that in mind if anyone is planning to hold positions for a long time e.g. months and years. It's not possible to hold them for years actually as they will expire within a set number of months. For short term trading the decay should be negligible especially if your options/warrants are not close to the expiry date.
What are these other factors?Correct options not really suitable for long term investing due to other factors but on the contrary long term positions are available with minimal time decay
What I'm getting at is you can't really generalize an option as having one particular feature, a position has multiple facets and considerations like time decay, delta, sensitivity to a change in delta, volatility,sensitivity to a change in volatility, interest rate considerations, divi considerations.... A starting point is deciding what your outlook is then structuring a position to suit, for example if you're convinced that a particular stock is going to shoot thru the roof buy OTM calls, negative theta will be large but positive gamma will be on your side if you're correct, you will also be long vega but prob not to your advantage due to the negative skew on the call side, a tweak could be selling higher strike calls to help fund this position and flatten out negative theta but this will cap profits....selling twice the higher strike calls will fund your position and take you to max profits around the outer strike but of course you'll be screwed if a takeover is announced...
My thoughts are you're taking this thread off topic. This thread is about shorting ASX stocks in general. Feel free to post your message in the international section, here: https://www.aussiestockforums.com/threads/uber-ipo.34607/Maybe Uber's IPO wasnt the best, and it lost almost 12% in two trading days
Thoughts?
cutz I feel your frustration mate, I was thinking about pulling a warrant short on one of the big four as well, but there was just too much volatility on the big mother of mortgage holders. You know 'which bank', right?Far out !!!
With the unexpected liberal victory I got caught on the wrong side of this position, will make good by buying a call fly (debit spread) over the top but it will cost me !!
Anyone else caught up holding bank shorts ( The Widowmaker Trade ) this week, how are you dealing with it ??
Did that ban only apply to actual stock shorts? Not puts?I remember a lot of traders got caught trying to short the Aussie banks during GFC (2007/2008) when the government put a ban on it. So people who had short positions had to liquidate them (buy back immediately)
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?