Condor Options is a New York-based research and trading firm focusing on market neutral trading strategies. Condor Options publishes an educational newsletter teaching iron condors and volatility-based options trading, with a focus on risk management and quantitative analysis. Jared Woodard is... More
I wondered last week whether we would see a return to the reflation rally or were entering a new regime dominated by mean reversion. The price action last week counts in favor of both, as we reverted to the closing highs of the prior week; I expect a more definitive answer by November options expiration.
The sale of out of the money equity index puts and/or put spreads I suggested last week worked out nicely, as prices moved higher and most of the equity implied volatility indexes printed five consecutive lower closes. For example, the SPX November 1020/1015 put vertical closed Monday at a $1.55 credit, and could have been closed Friday for a debit of about $0.35, a 34% return on capital risked. Our newsletter subscribers and managed accounts were positioned similarly.
The 30-day historical volatility of oil (USO) made new lows for the year, closing Friday at 27.24. [16] The last time this short-term measure of oil volatility was this low was in May 2008 amidst a strong up-trend. In contrast, recent price action has been relatively trendless; the spike to 1.6 in the implied/realized ratio this week suggests that any option buyers have seen considerably less volatility than they paid for a month ago. I would consider net buying options with crude below the $76 level.
Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha
community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors,
in contrast to contributors' articles.
Instablogs are Seeking Alpha's free blogging platform customized for finance, with instant set up and exposure to millions of readers interested in the financial markets. Publish your own instablog in minutes.
Weekly Volatility Tracker: Reversion to the Trend 0 comments
I wondered last week whether we would see a return to the reflation rally or were entering a new regime dominated by mean reversion. The price action last week counts in favor of both, as we reverted to the closing highs of the prior week; I expect a more definitive answer by November options expiration.
The sale of out of the money equity index puts and/or put spreads I suggested last week worked out nicely, as prices moved higher and most of the equity implied volatility indexes printed five consecutive lower closes. For example, the SPX November 1020/1015 put vertical closed Monday at a $1.55 credit, and could have been closed Friday for a debit of about $0.35, a 34% return on capital risked. Our newsletter subscribers and managed accounts were positioned similarly.
The 30-day historical volatility of oil (USO) made new lows for the year, closing Friday at 27.24. [16] The last time this short-term measure of oil volatility was this low was in May 2008 amidst a strong up-trend. In contrast, recent price action has been relatively trendless; the spike to 1.6 in the implied/realized ratio this week suggests that any option buyers have seen considerably less volatility than they paid for a month ago. I would consider net buying options with crude below the $76 level.





Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors, in contrast to contributors' articles.
Latest Followers
Posts by Ticker
Latest Comments
Most Commented
Posts by Themes