Sep 4 – Trade Plan

I had to take a break from posting. Those two weeks were probably the worst two weeks I’ve ever experienced. Managing the trades in this transitionary environment (extreme low volatility to extreme high volatility) has taken me to task and almost made me quit. We did terribly these past few weeks. Our MICs were utterly destroyed in the Monday correction and further the adjustments made (a mistake in hindsight) as the market moved 5% consistently over night in each direction several times.

We’ve got a few things hanging over the market right now and that is the fact that Chinese markets are open 2 full days before the US markets re labour day and the likely Fed rate hike on Sept 17th. Those two things are keeping options pricing very expensive. Being a market neutral theta decay based trader having originally been paid shit in a low volatility environment has been the biggest challenge. We’re experiencing 3-5% moves overnight and we’re getting no time decay. You literally cannot get a worse time for these trades and I have regrets in the management of the trades during the period. Though, I do realize most of these regrets are regrets in hindsight. I couldn’t have known the market would go green nor could I have let things ride the way we were positioned. All in all what an epic learning experience. I have weeks of data and thoughts to go over. I need to take this experience and learn everything I can from it.

As market neutral traders, we try to manage risk by making adjustments, but if we are constantly adjusting in each direction, we get killed. This means that we usually have to change the way we make adjustments (less frequently) but that exposes us to gamma risk if the market runs in one specific direction. My plan is to sideline the majority of my risk until after the 17th and wait for the market to calm down a bit then enter good solid trades and start the recovery process. As well, if we get a crash, I WILL enter some trades to take advantage of that (with great risk reward). This gives us the best odds for a smooth recovery. A few good months should get us back to where we were.

I tried to do the best I could at the time but I would do things differently. I opted to adjust pretty much when it was too late. I should have exited the MIC trades and took the loss. Instead, I adjusted and those adjustments cost me more than my planned loss as the market whip-sawed up and down in very large amounts. Each one taking more and more $. Taking a max loss isn’t just taking it for the sake of not having more, but the fact that you are at a max loss also means that the market is doing things it doesn’t usually do –> it’s not behaving rational or within normal parameters. That in and of itself is the main reason to just exit and wait. Given the conditions and what I saw in option pricing and market behaviours and how each strategy reacted (PUTS didn’t even have an ASK price during the morning!!) I learned so much and have so much to study about what happened, that it’ll make me a much better trader. I’ve now got an extreme melt up and an extreme melt down under my belt 🙂

So yeah, the transitionary period is the absolute worst thing we could have experienced (going from extreme low volatility to extreme high volatility) because we simply never got paid for the risk before the high volatility period. It’s no problem once we’re in high volatility and we get paid appropriately. However, that said, any EXTREME volatility market that was preceded by some sort of black swan (Yuan devaluation) will always be somewhat catastrophic for these types of trades. The event that we experienced is a 1 in 7 to 10 year event. We are still in an extreme volatility period while we navigate the devaluation issues and the potential fed rate hike on Sept 17th. This exposes our trades and I’ve reduced risk going into the weekend though not completely.

I felt so often to just quit but I’ve realized that I just went through a crash period that will be so invaluable to my experience in the future that I have to buck up and approach this as an opportunity to learn from direct experience in something that is such a risk but are experienced quite rarely and sometimes only once in someones options trading career.

Oh by the way, something super cool –> The protector alpha did not actually lose any capital throughout the crash or days following. We entered it at around SPY 205-206 and it was insured for that level. SPY went up to 213 and of course we had profits wiped out but we never lost capital. Now that is insane. We are at SPY 192 and we’re break-even. The market corrected 10% and our basket of equities were in fact 100% hedged. We participate in upside but not downside. Had we rolled our insurance, we’d actually be profitable.

Aug 23- Trade Update

That was a week for the history books. Oil had its largest weekly fall since ’86. Vix went up 47% in a week which is the highest in all history. The speed of the decline was also extremely unusual. I’ve read that perhaps the market cycles will be more square like rather than Sine like due to the efficiencies in this age (information hits markets instantly). Anyways, this decline reminds me of the up movement in October. These things are happening over night and giving no-one time to adjust. It makes for managing time decay based strategies quite difficult.

The protector portfolio is actually still up just shy of 1% while the SPY is down 4%. The equities were actually still up 2.5% but the hedge is down about 1.5%. So its outperforming SPY by about 5%. Nice. However, this last very swift correction has told me that I have have too much downside exposure. The MIC does not like increased volatility and sharp down moves nor does the protector. These were my leading strategies up until about a few months ago when I added the M3 and Bearish butterflies. Both of these have held up and are still mostly profitable though bruised from their specific highs. I’m leaning too much re risk to the downside and I need to adjust the ratios of the strategies. I’ll probably reduce the Protector to about 15%, the MIC to about 15% and the M3 to 50% and do the Rock trade and opportunistic Bearish Butterflies with the rest.

Like I said above, though, I know exactly how the protector would perform in a sharp down move, I’ve decided I am not comfortable with the downside exposure when coupled with everything else and how it affects my downside risks. Having two strategies go sharply down at the same time is not a great feeling and adds unnecessary stress. So I’ve decided to start working on lessening the ratio of these strategies within my own portfolio. I won’t be doing this reduction willy nilly but timed appropriately. The strategy does well, I mean it’s still up it’s just doesn’t fit well within all the other trades.

The RUT trades are down about 4-5% during that last fall. I imagine at least half of that is stuck in the prices of the options re volatility. Remember, the RVX/VIX are at extreme levels. That means that the options are priced with a lot of premium. The same options we sold. So the trades appear quite down. As time gets closer to expiry this volatility has to flow out and we’ll continue to maintain appropriate risk. Ideally, we don’t correct much more than a few more % before a strong bounce.

The SPX MIC trades are down 9%! This is expected as the SPX was the most dramatic collapse of the two. It fell 3% on Friday while the RUT only fell 1.1%. Any bounce should recover the trade to at least 4% down and we’ll do a larger adjustment then while maintaining appropriate deltas if we should have more down Monday. As we close in on expiry, I’ll be doing my best to get these things back to break-even. I’ve done it 2 times before during a correction. It just takes appropriate risk management and a level unemotional head 🙂

Overall, as of right now, with the options volatility at extremes and thus the option pricing also at extremes, when we look at all Aug (already posted results) and Sep trades, we are down about 2-2.5% overall. Not bad considering the events and also not bad since it is quite likely we will recoup a lot in the Sept trades. The trades weren’t designed really to withstand a furious drop with 80% of the downside happening after hours. Unfortunately, you can’t design a trade to weather all storms.

As I am following market news right now, I see that the bank of China has indicated that they are lessening reserve requirements, S. Korea and N.Korea have de-escalated the skirmish and Iran has requested an emergency OPEC meeting to combat the falling oil prices. This might be the bullish catalyst to spur a furious bounce. We shall see. A bounce would certainly be nice for the protector and also to adjust the MICs.
Update:  In an effort to curb the fall in the markets, China is going to allow pension funds to invest 30 % of its assets(546 Bln) in the financial markets and that includes all sorts of financial instruments.  Let’s see if the Shanghai composite holds that 3500 level and we see a bounce. 

Aug 13 – Trade plan

These past few weeks have been interesting. On the 6th, the market fell quite a bit but we were only 3% from all time highs.  There were no new headlines just the same old bearish stories (rate hikes, Puerto Rico default, Greece etc etc). I didn’t expect a full out correction because the people scared of those specific head lines had already sold long ago and we were only 3% from ATH.  Obviously, the current holders weren’t too worried about those specific issues and aren’t going to sell on most news coming out of those regions.  However, on Monday we had a new headline which wasn’t present before, the devaluing of the Yuan and the implications of a weakening China.  These types of unexpected headlines are the ones that have the power to cause selling. It takes time to quantify the effects of a devalued Yuan and brings an unknown into the market for most participants and unknowns can cause panicked selling.  I didn’t expect as strong a bounce we had yesterday and the strength of the down move usually suggests more to come.  I waited for a smallish bounce to reposition and ended the day with a negative delta upside risk! Go figure!  Anyways, this is a very whippy market and normally I’d be moving my delta limits on the upside a bit higher to accommodate for the volatility. However, this market refuses to correct. It had the opportunity yesterday and it decided to close green. Yesterdays action suggests more upside ahead barring no new headlines from China.  It was definitely a bullish move and I’ll be taking that into consideration alongside my current thought to allow more upside room before adjusting. Confusing market no doubts.

The devaluing Yuan should help the US economy as it is a net importer so maybe this was a washout opportunity to shake out the confused and fearful weak hands for a big bullish move to all time highs?

 

 

 

 

 

Aug 13 – Back in Action

It was a rough go the past 2 weeks with more sporadic travel, driving and hotel stays. This put me in a constant catch up mode with both work and the market and I had little time to update the blog.  I should will be back to regular posts and updates from here on in, probably every day.

We’re now finished the “road trip” part of the “sabbatical” and are in London, UK where we will trade in our Tesla for an american version for use in the Cayman. Tesla HQ is accommodating me in this respect and I’ll end up with a new P85D (a 3s 0-60 car) for not a whole lot more when considering the differences in the price of the Tesla in UK vs USA. It all worked out.

The market was nuts yesterday. That was a tough tough go but I am confident and proud in how it was handled. The market fell 1.6% only to rebound into the green for a 3% round trip in one single day all the while the entire market has moved 5% in the entire year!  Not an easy environment for a theta based market neutral group of strategies. In fact, it was or should have been one of the toughest days a trade like that could experience.

For the M3s I added 1170 butterflies to hedge the downside and on the bounce (around RUT 1195 – an area I expected the bounce to stall) I took off some 1230s. Of course, the market did something I haven’t seen and the SPY ended up closing green on a <1.5% red day and the RUT just slightly red sitting around 1210 after touching the 1180s. Ah well, my entire account balance didn’t move to much by the end of the day (down maybe 0.5%) but the adjustments surely cost me. The size and intensity of the adjustments were nominal and probably the best case we could have expected if a rebound this size should have occurred. Can’t help but wish you were psychic and could have waited 🙂 With a fall that intense, you have to manage your risk and it is what it is.

The AUG MICs were mostly closed on Monday (thankfully). Some straggling parts to close out today. Will post the results soon. All positive.

The SEP MICs had debit spreads and bearish butterflies added to them on the down move yesterday and are probably around break even so far for the month.

Come Sept 1, I’ll start posting all my trades and adjustments as they occur.

 

Aug 1 – Trade Plan

I’ve officially added the M3 trade into my larger portfolio. I find it a much more conservative trade than the MIC in terms of risks, but strangely it should produce slightly better results, which is quite interesting.  It’s also a lot less stringent on timing of adjustments and more forgiving in general. From a direct comparison to just the mechanics of the trade vs the MIC, it is a better trade overall. The edge for the MIC is my experience managing it.  Either way, it’s a nice strong compliment to the MIC. The M3 is a trade John Locke developed when he was at the Sheridan mentor program. He’s since branched out on his own. It’s 10 bearish butterflies coupled with 1 long call thats DITM as to have no time value. It’s a market neutral time decay based trade. It’s got very little upside risk, and the downside adjustments usually occur when the trade is already up money and when the butterfly is close to its max value for that specific time in the trade. That’s neat.

Theoretical backtesting of the MIC in a strictly mechanical way produced an average of 3.3% a month since 2008, where the M3 produces an average of about 5% per month. However, with active management of the MIC and use of several indicators, I gather I am closer to 4%-4.5% over time.

For a neat look as to how well the M3 handles any market environment, in 2011 if you had put the trade on at the top of the market and had it on through the huge 63 point down day (what was that 8% down day?) and all the way to the bottom (~200 points??) and its subsequent rebound, the trade still came out at a win of the target 10%. That’s a resilient trade. This was managing the trade by checking only once per day at 3pm. That’s it. No intra-day adjustments besides that. Even during that 63 point down day, it was still up money.

Come September, I’ll start posting my trades and adjustments.

 

 

 

 

Jul 29 – Trade Plan

The protector Alpha is up 3% for the year vs SPY ~1.3%.  We got hurt a bit on the last whipsaw. I had reluctantly rolled my 211 short puts to 213.5 when the market was at around 213 for a loss having missed the big upswing and thus losing on intrinsic value. The market moved very quickly and I just couldn’t stay up on it (overnight gaps etc).  THEN the market decided to suddenly reverse falling to 206 leaving our 213s with no extrinsic value. Talk about whipsaw. I then rolled to 211 to get a bit of extrinsic now it’s on its way up again. I do believe this is a bounce into fed Wednesday and that we may stall or reverse hard but I’ll be sure to quickly roll if we come near 210.5. Not a great environment for rolling the shorts.  That and the big loss NEM had (was actually -15%) has put our PA account at just about 3% for the year.  Leveraged 7x = 21% or just about 3.5% a month for the year. This is better than expected given the market this year. This is a bullish strategy and has its place in our portfolio. It does well when the market does well yet is completely hedged on the downside. It’s not the big returns you’ll see in the market neutral options strategies but it’ll help in big bullish years. Maybe those years are behind us in the next 5 year time span? I don’t know.

My balance moved up 5% yesterday after the fall in volatility. Again, it shows how the mids and stated option pricing moves around so much in high volatility environments. It’s like the volatility was just sucked out of my accounts yesterday. It wasn’t delta losses or actual losses, it’s just that when the volatility floods out the MID pricing gets tighter and more accurate especially in the SPX.  This can affect your stated balance (AND margin calculations quite a bit). Any new traders utilizing portfolio margin should be aware of this. You can go to bed with PM stating 100k liquid only to wake up having it show -100k and be forced into liquidations.  It’s happened to me in my early days running MICs. You end up buying back risk at a premium during the first 15 min of market open. Not pleasant.  There are tricks to reduce margin during these 15 min but that’s a subject of another post.

Some early results:

Aug Bearish butterfly: Up about 15%

Aug M3: Up about 8%

Rock Trades: up about 4%

 

Jul 22 – Trade Plan

We had another RUT down day yesterday so I entered some more Aug MIC since the prices were good enough. It’s pretty damn close, and I don’t usually enter the trade this close (32 DTE) but the prices were decent and I am going to keep my profit targets on that part of the trade a bit lower.  The futures are down again and I might enter a final part today bringing our allocation to 50% for the month.

I closed about 75% of the SPX MIC put credit spreads when it touched 213.  It appears it was great timing as the market just fell a bunch since then. Yesterday I sold more to get the delta’s in line and to replace the ones I bought back.  Trade is looking great.

The RUT MIC is doing fine as well. I think it’s up 3-4%.

All in all, we are just holding our ground. The protector alpha shorts got a bit over-run and I had to adjust a few days ago – Only to have the market reverse 🙂

My bearish butterfly for Aug is up about 20% (the return is calculated a bit differently than the MIC returns).

Aug Kevlar trade is up nicely

Aug M3 trade is up 5-10%

All in all, sitting at all time highs and getting ready to enter the next trades.

Jul 11 – Trade Plan (Results)

What a week. I closed the MICs for July at 4.268% which is a great result considering the whipsaw and challenges that the large gap ups and moves provided towards the end of our last week.  It was fortunate we had a big up day today to allow for some volatility to flow out.

The Protector alpha is up about 4% for the year completely hedged vs SPY which is up about 0.6%

My first bearish butterfly went extremely well with a 30% return.

 

 

Jul 10 – Trade Plan

Yet again, another huge range yesterday.  Opened to go up to about 207.3 only to fall back down to 204.4. you can see the hourly SPY chart for an indication of this environment. The VIX was approaching 22 and again had an inflationary effect on my MIC trades.  For a non-directional trader that has to manage risk, it can be quite a difficult environment. However, every AM, I look at the futures and its consistently going according to my previous end of day plans.Screen Shot 2015-07-10 at 8.49.07 AM

 

Yesterday, the market fell and I evened out our deltas a bit as I started peeling off some of the trade (I took off about 9 units of 15 put spreads on the RUT MIC right at open). The market proceeded to fall and fall and as it went down, and because I peeled off about 9 units, I had to remove the corresponding debt spreads (insurance I bought to protect the insurance I sold). I thought I was getting good timing as I was taking these off while the market was falling away from where I closed the 9 units.  Unfortunately by the end of the day, the market had fallen so much that we ended up approaching our downside adjustments and that meant that the debit spreads I sold would have been worth way more. I could have let the market keep falling and not sold the insurance, but I felt it wasn’t appropriate risk management. If the market should bounce, it’d have hurt the trade and let’s be honest, its volatile as hell right now and I really don’t wanna pick sides intra-day within a channel. I’d rather have been more neutral than lean significantly. Luckily, the futures are up about 23 points right now and that will make for a great day to roll off the July trades.

Right after the markets closed, Greece presented a plan that includes most of the austerity measures European leaders demanded and combined with an amazing China open, that put our futures up for the night. I hope it holds for another few hours so I can get out of some of the SPX when it opens at 4am NY time. Can’t wait to get out of this trade. I had to actually work for my money this month 🙂 But despite the crazy end of trade volatility, we’re going to do well enough on this thing.

I’ve got an M3, Bearish Butterfly and Kevlar trade on-going right now.  I love the resilience of the M3 and Kevlar and the returns of the Bearish Butterfly. Strong theta based trades and a great addition to the MIC.  They’re similar but with their own advantages/disadvantages. Soon come, I’ll be working on getting the M21 trade going but its quite a bit more complicated and I need a month of concentration.

 

 

Jul 9 – Trade Plan

Another wild day. The Chinese markets had half their equities halted and the NYSE halted trading after a technical error causing a bit of panic in the markets. Volatility reared its ugly head again and the pricing of our Jul MIC options went up.  No chance to exit yet and we did have to adjust a bit more on the way down. Both trades are still well within positive territory and only lost a tiny bit through the wild day yesterday if any at all (I can’t tell because the mids are all over the place as is usual in high volatility times like this –Especially in the SPX options).

There is a nice bounce in the futures and Shanghai is up 6% but I wouldn’t expect much more than a bounce here which could only last for tomorrow or it could go for a few days.  The CPC (put-call ratio) is extremely high and usually these means more down ahead but we shouldn’t be too far from a bottom.  Additionally, the bullish percentages are also quite weak across the board

BPNYA -1.02%, BPCOMPQ -1.48%, BPSPX -0.73%, BPOEX-1.59%, BPENER -7.69% – but BPFINA +1.85% and BPINDU +5.56% are up. Only BPNDX is flat

Heavyweights of SPX: aapl -2.48%, xom -1.09%, msft -0.14%, jnj -1.16%, brk -1.11%, wfc -1.78%, ge -2.19%, jpm -2.05%, pg -0.89% ibm -1.12%, pfe -0.83%, goog -1.56%, sbux -1.81%, amzn -1.61%, t -1.44% (Source: Uempel@Cobra)

In any case, I am going to just start to close the trade on any bounce and call it a day for July.  Things are just too volatile to hold much longer, we’ll take what we can get and use any decline to enter more into our Aug MIC. I did enter about 4 units yesterday during a big decline. I was getting decently paid on 200 point (1870/1850s) which is great. If I enter any more in the next days on down, I will be using a ratio of 5:1 for the put spreads to call spreads rather than 3:1.  The plan will be to add the other 2 on any large upwards retracement.