Options Trading with HEDGE FUND Manager DAVID SUN

Options Trading with HEDGE FUND Manager DAVID SUN

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i'm David Jaffee i have a youtube channel  youtube.com/beststockstrategy and a website   beststockstrategy.com. hey David Sun  here host of the trade busters podcast   follow me on twitter at the Trade Buster i think  most of my followers know me and uh just a quick   thing um one of the guys on my Discord mike i  think David he knew you from before right had done   a couple interviews and uh he kind of connected  us. i think he introduced you to my podcast   and i think you just figured uh be cool to connect  with someone like minded maybe just chat options   you know things we agree on things we maybe  don't just don't agree on just kind of add   value to both our listeners is that kind of how  how this all got started yeah definitely i um   so this call will be around 45 minutes and our  main objective is to add as much value as possible   and just to give the viewers something to  think about and to ponder so I think that   really without further ado we should get started  in order to maximize time yeah let's do it so the   first topic is what are your thoughts regarding  the value of persistent hedges versus something   like selling further out of the money puts  and trading small so i kind of see that as   two different things hedging is you know  you can talk about proactive or reactive you   know proactive hedging which is i think what you  come up in terms of persistent is kind of buying   you know out of the money puts on the market call  options on VIX whatever it is and i think there's   a place for that it kind of depends on overall  how large you're trading to begin with which you   kind of alluded to what kind of strategies what  are you protecting like do you are you doing just   options do you have some kind of core portfolio  do you have a buy and hold component where you   don't have any kind of risk mitigation and so in  those cases you might need some kind of persistent   hedge to you know at least cut the draw down  a bit right if things get really wild and i   also have to think about what kind of hedging how  about tail risk or you trying to just hedge like a   five percent run-of-the-mill in a little blip  small correction right because obviously if you're   trying to hit something that's going to happen  pretty frequently it's going to cost you a lot   you might not get that much bang for the buck tail  risk you know once in a decade 20 year you know 20   30 crashes that's kind of more extreme and usually  i only look for persistent hedges to be based on   tail events because if you're trying to just  hedge every bump in the road right you're gonna   kind of overspend a lot so see what kind of your  thoughts on that are i kind of sometimes i go   back and forth like on the one hand i think that  trading spreads is really good because the spreads   inherently protect you against the volatility  expansion in my opinion that's the primary   advantage you have both the capital efficiency  benefit of trading a spread and then you also have   the volatility expansion protection i do sometimes  though when i speak to some of my friends who use   strategies for like they'll buy two farther  out of the money long put options in order to   protect against tail risk my issue with that  is that they're using back testing and then   they're going based upon volatility expansion but  it's really hard to predict volatility expansion   based upon a decline in the s p so  for example if you take something like   i think it was uh monday february 5th 2019 where  the s p was down around 100 so now it would be   down let's say like 150 but at that time the vix  spiked from i think like 15 to about like over 50   and then you had a situation even yesterday which  was january 24th 2022 where at one point um the   s p was down tremendously yet even so the vix i  think got to a high of about like 39 so i think   that obviously like having like always keeping it  in the back of your mind that you can have a high   win rate but that doesn't necessarily mean that  you're going to be profitable long term but i'm   not certain that having persistent hedges and  always being concerned about something that has   a low probability like a low probability event is  the best way to trade i think that you can reduce   drawdowns by either using spreads or going further  out of the money or trying to use smaller amounts   of capital especially during times when volatility  is low like certain things like that those are   my my thoughts regarding it yeah small amount  of capital i think sizing is always the first   line of defense and you know what you mentioned  about the buying the two out of the money puts   that's basically a back ratio and you're right you  can't predict volatility and what's going to occur   and so the first line of defense is having risk  management either via size or having stops or   some kind of adjustment though the back ratio  approach and this kind of tail risk hedging   is really for those kind of emergency where  you don't think of it right so if you have uh   if you wake up and you know there's a nuclear  bomb or something markets down you know 20   obviously with circuit breakers that's pretty  unlikely you know but some kind of unforeseen   event and whether or not you need this  kind of you know we call it level two   um that's what i call it kind of like black  swan risk really is up to just your base sizing   right if you're trading cash secured or very low  notional um very unlikely you're gonna blow up   even with a pretty big event but as you you know  with options is leverage right so as you want to   increase your target return increase your sizing  you want to push the limits of your account a   little bit more under normal circumstances you can  still control that like you said with buying power   with what stops risk management but there comes  to be a point where the sizing is if there was an   uncontrollable event you'd risk a blow up and  those are the times when you want that secondary   factor kick in those are the times when that back  ratio the volatility event is going to happen so   it really depends on your approach and your kind  of sizing to begin with and determining whether   or not you need that second piece so it's not a  one size fits all yeah i definitely agree it's   uh it's valuable it's not there's no definitive  answer here and we'll touch upon this later but   at the same time i do think that it's definitely  valuable to give up some of your returns in order   to decrease the volatility of your returns because  the stress component of seeing losses and also not   being able to sleep at night or being concerned  by constantly monitoring the futures market   that is something that you have to take into  account so if it costs you a little bit of money   in order to mitigate that downside risk then  i definitely think that it's advantageous even   if it means that over the long term you're  going to sacrifice a little bit of profit the second thing is i wanted your thoughts on  on back testing and where you see it fits in   in order to allow people to be consistently  profitable and to optimize their trading strategy   so with back testing the the biggest thing is  it gives you context but it's not necessarily   going to give you that holy grail strategy  because there comes a fine line between testing   to see kind of the characteristics and behavior  of a strategy and where the back testing becomes   the strategy as in you plug in 20 different  inputs filters and aha this thing worked   like a like a charm in this particular market you  know and this you guys you're getting the curve   fitting right and because you know back testing by  definition is backwards looking right and we have   no idea how something is going to look or if it's  going to behave moving forward so generally the   more inputs the more variables the more filters  the kind of more fragile that entire result is and   the less resilient it is going to be the kind of  the future market behavior because we just don't   know and so the main thing is what i like to do  is more focus on you know if i understand kind of   number one options and how to behave i have some  inkling of how a certain strategy should behave   in various market environments and i more use  mark i use the back test to kind of confirm my   hypothesis to say hey yes the the strategy  generally did this when a certain you know kind of   market happened rather than using the back test as  the creation of the strategy right so i start from   having a strategy i want to try and thinking  about it and really reasoning out how it should   work based on actual knowledge math right you  know options math and greeks and everything   and then using kind of the back test to backfill  and just kind of build some conviction and get   some context about okay it did in fact  do what i kind of anticipated generally i think that was incredibly well said and i agree  with you completely where back testing is really   like in my opinion it's a tool in your toolkit in  your toolbox but it shouldn't become your strategy   and my personal feelings are that people from  you know speaking to a lot of people and from   experience i think that traders rely way too much  on back testing where they think that because   something has worked in the past then it has  a high propensity to work in the future and   i went to cornell and one of my favorite classes  was taught by tom gilovich and he did a research   study about like the hot hand theory where people  if they hit like a few shots in a row then people   allocated and misattributed and they thought that  that person was hot and that they had a higher   propensity of hitting their future shots i think  that people need to recognize that as human beings   we have a propensity to look for patterns and  then try to attribute them and try to predict the   future and oftentimes those patterns can be false  and i do believe that traders if they want to be   successful in the long term they are  responsible for their decisions and they   shouldn't completely rely upon the back testing  back testing can be a tool but you also have to   dig into the data and ask yourself when you have  so many small occurrences you should ask yourself   whether this is statistically valid or whether  this is the mode or the median or whether you're   looking at the mean because oftentimes we tend  to disregard the mode which is the most repeated   but if you have a situation like we've had over  the past week where the nasdaq has dropped around   10 and the s p has dropped around 8 or 9 then you  have to make sure that you try to mitigate that   from happening and you have to make sure that  that one the numbers are statistically valid   and also which numbers you're looking at whether  it's the median the mean or the mode so yeah back   testing i'm all for it but just don't rely upon  it too heavily and make sure that you implement   and you use that data but it doesn't free you  from the decision making process and it doesn't   free you from taking ultimate responsibility and  making your trades yeah and one other thing um i   want to point out it's sort of an aspect of  back testing that some people don't realize   you know with uh tools like e-delta pro and  off-the-shelf back testing software where   they make it so easy to just crank out 100  tests change this parameter add that filter   and one thing you have to remember is markets are  changing over time right even literally the price   of the s p is changing over time right for example  and your account is changing over time and the   reason that makes a difference is if we're talking  about a one-year test maybe not so big of a deal   but if you talk about like a multi-year test  the thing that you have to realize with kind   of these back test software is they typically  do something simplistic like a fixed delta test   or fix one contract test right so you have  a fixed sizing that's arbitrary that can be   completely different relative to your account size  relative to the size of the market as time goes on   so that's going to skew the result in practice  and what i normally do is i do something   called a longitudinal study where you take kind  of that raw back test data now if you're going   to create a back custom back test engine build  it yourself you can address this but if you're   going to use these kind of off-the-shelf softwares  that have very simplistic testing they do give you   like an output of the log but you want to kind  of change up the sizing and make it true to life   because you have to look at the size you know like  maybe you're doing like a put selling strategy and   the credit received right you need to make sure it  makes sense right if you're gonna sell you know a   hundred dollars the hundred dollars relative to  your account is going to change so depending on   the account size i'll kind of change it up so  things i change things dynamically with respect   to the account size with respect to the market  so that actually makes it like the test reflects   how you would actually trade through that time  and not just some static one lot over and over   again which might make no sense and in the context  of things so just something to keep in mind just   showing that back testing is nuanced you know  it's not always about okay run a thousand tests   until i get the best scenario and let's just go  with that that's fine yeah i agree all right the   next question for for question number three what  are your thoughts regarding having trading rules   vary based upon mix levels so i think conceptually  this makes sense personally i don't do it and i'll   say why not that is right or wrong but if you  think about the last question on the back testing   right and we talked about filters like people talk  about okay i'm gonna do risk on if you know this   moving you know average crosses over this this  other moving average is like a risk off signal   and you know vix or i think volatility levels  those in in and of themselves can be sort of   a risk on risk-off signal so it makes sense you  know because we know volatility is mean reverting   and volatility there's certain things at different  levels it makes sense that you can kind of bucket   it into these different regimes and you know  if you do just a simple filter even volatility   you can split a back test or any kind of strategy  into like okay if i ran it in high-vis low-vicks   you're gonna see different qualities and behaviors  at least you'll think you will because people   always want to see patterns um so it kind of makes  sense and just because certain strategies the   way they're built don't work well in low vicks or  high vix so if you have the conviction to do that   i think it can make sense right especially with  something like volatility because we all do   believe there are certain quality characteristics  right depending on what market does i don't think   you can reasonably predict if the market's going  to go up or down but depending on where vix is at   i think you can reasonably say is it going to go  down or up right so that mean reverting behavior   so because of that and i think there is sort  of mathematical proof of that behavior we can   you know presumably bucket your strategies  into kind of high vic slow vix but personally   i just still prefer simplistic things so i i  tend to do strategies that you know i'm gonna run   no matter what um for better or worse um but  i understand and see kind of the value and the   reasoning behind that my thoughts on this are  this is one layer of subjectivity that and this   is going back to nuance and this is why i i think  that there should be some level of subjectivity in   trading because it is actually quite easy to trade  options during periods like right now when the vix   is trading at about 30 or 35. the problem is that  if you traded too large and if you traded during   times when the vix is trading at around like 15  then there's a high probability that you're being   forced to defend the majority of your positions  that you put on during periods of low vix and   that you don't necessarily have a lot of buying  power in order to take advantage of the volatility   expansion and you know that begs the question some  of you might be thinking okay well the vix usually   spends the majority of his time between 15 and 20.  so am i advocating not trading at all when the vix  

is between 15 and 20 the answer to that is no but  what i am advocating is using significantly less   buying power so for example you could potentially  use like 20 20 of the of your account size when   the vix is trading between 15 or 20 or perhaps you  trade vertical credit spreads because during times   when the vix is low then buying that insurance  is actually really inexpensive if you buy that   insurance now when the vix is trading at 30 35  then it's going to cost you significantly more   than during times when the vix was trading at  around 15 and you also need that insurance when   the vix is at 15 because it will protect you  against the volatility expansion the other thing   that i like to do during times when the vix is  trading low is i will go further out of the money   to protect myself against volatility expansion  and i will also increase the days to expiration   because that would actually make the trade  worthwhile when the vix is trading at 15   even using portfolio margin if i trade something  farther out of the money then i'm not necessarily   collecting enough premium to make that trade  worthwhile unless i increase my dte to you know   60 to 90 days but um i definitely believe that  it's worthwhile for at least traders to consider   altering their strategy during times when the  vix is low relative to when the vix is high   makes sense the um the next question is whether  you believe that traders should be comfortable   with some level of subjectivity in their trading  and whether this can potentially improve entries   for a little bit of context on this um for example  let's say you look at like the recent trading   range of of a stock and then when you say that  okay this stock like whether it be amazon or apple   or you know even like the s p since i i  believe you like to trade like like spx and spy   if you would look at like the  recent trading range and then   by selling a put when the spy or an individual  stock would be at the low end of this trading   range then that could potentially reduce your  risk and additionally because there's higher   implied volatility in that specific underlying  then it could potentially enable you to collect   more premium as well what are your what are your  thoughts so um i think partially it comes down to   the personality of the individual trader because  for me and you'll hear this a lot a lot of it   comes down to conviction right if you have a  strategy but you don't have the conviction or the   confidence to execute it doesn't matter anyways  and so for me and people follow my podcast and   know my strategies are kind of based on the same  type of mechanics where i enter 15 delta 90 tte   do it every day now obviously that doesn't mean  the trade is going to be the same all the time   because as volatility goes up 15 delta is going  to get further from the money for example so there   is some kind of self-regulating aspect to the  strategy just as a function of markets right so   the decision for me is just to follow  that strategy but discretion like i think   i i do believe there's people if you have  the skill or the knowledge or the experience   i don't know maybe luck where you can time  or have a better entry or whatever it is   but for me like i think it  helps me simplify things and not   kind of second-guess myself when i follow  a strategy that's kind of more mechanical   there is a tiny bit of discretion um but i think  part of this also comes down to i know some people   it may 100 mechanical may not be suitable like  people like to have that feel of being in control   or at least have the illusion of control right  because they feel like there's some engagement or   if i oh i saw this pattern or i feel like because  of this that this is a good entry and you can own   if you can own that decision and  have the conviction and still have   you know be able to manage it and have the proper  risk management like you maybe you feel better   about that trade rather than just oh i feel like  um you know for for a mechanical trader they   might be like oh i feel like they're just blindly  entering regardless of the market no i get that   thought process right um so part of it comes  down to again the personality of the trader now   whether or not you can truly add edge or you  know extract more profits being discretionary   but probably you know there's been people that  have done it or who have shown it now again   is that luck is this there's outliers hard to say  but i know that it's extraordinarily difficult   and i don't know that i have the experience  to do it consistently or feel like i do   you know but using discretion so you know i kind  of choose to just kind of be more mechanical   at least mostly for your four-year zero dte i  think you sell spx options like using portfolio   margin on like monday wednesday and friday right  right right so did you did you open a new contract   yesterday and are you planning on selling zero  gte tomorrow as well or do you have marketing   for zero dt i mean the exact entry changes  depending on the time of day and everything   but yeah i mean we trade the same amount of trades  every time and you know people talk about avoiding   fomc days or when vix is a certain amount or if  they think the market's going to be trending or   whatever and no we just do as many trades as we  can let the probabilities play out and so what   they have and so i mean it's worked right and it's  just something where you don't have to you know   there's making a decision and it works in your  favor great right nobody cares about that it's   more like you make a decision and goes against you  number one do you have the wherewithal to correct   it as in pull the plug if you need to instead  of get you know getting smashed if your trade's   moving against you or and number two when you do  have to take a loss like how do you handle that   right there's a cost to everything right there's  a there's a reaction action reaction and there's a   there's a consequence to those decisions not just  in your p l but in your in your psychology as well   yeah i i agree i i also do think that if  if it were me and instead of being like   90 to 100 um objective i would probably want to  be like 65 70 objective um if it were me and i   was running like a zero dte i probably wouldn't  feel comfortable with it considering that if the   spx opens up down tomorrow like like 50 points  given that volatility is actually pretty high   right now you're probably not going to see  like a tremendous increase in in vix but if   you're selling a put then you actually might see a  relatively large loss in your put option that you   put on previously and then additionally because  the vix is high if you wait for you know one or   two days of affirmation where the market shows  you that it's stabilized a little bit then the   vix still might be trading in like the high 20s  or low 30s and i think that you'll still be able   to collect premium you probably won't get stopped  out or you might get stopped i mean who knows but   i just think that it increases the probability  without having to go through the stress of   constantly monitoring the market during times when  the market is irrational because i believe that   the market is pretty much rational you know 85  90 percent of the time but it's at those extremes   because the market aggregates so many different  factors including human behavior and we do know   that human behavior is not rational that's kind of  like the study of psychology and i think that at   the extremes both on the euphoria again and then  also during on the fear end those are times where   i kind of would prefer just to play defense and  not be like overly aggressive because like i said   before the vix can be trading at like 35 or  40 which means that you can still collect a   significant amount of premium and then you  can wait for one or two stabilization days   and the vix is still going to be trading  in like the high 20s low 30s if you look at   2020 uh you pretty much had elevated vix for the  entire year and yes the vix didn't hit like you   know it hit i think 84 in like march 2020 but it  was still trading in like the 50s for like one or   two months after that and you know you can collect  a lot of money while also reducing the risk so   yeah i guess i i believe that there should be  like a little bit more subjectivity as opposed   to just like like having it be completely  objective yeah i mean it's a spectrum right   like you mentioned 60 70 percent i'm probably  more than like the 90 95 mechanical but you know   again the step two personality temperament and  kind of the strategy that you're running as well   the the next question is what i've listened i  think to about like 80 or 85 of your podcast   and i was wondering uh what are your thoughts  regarding like selling calls as like especially   during times like like now because personally  like um i'm stuck in like a paypal position   and my strikes aren't that bad but part of the  reason why they're not bad is because i've been   able to collect a significant amount of premium by  selling calls and then rolling down the put side   so um like what are your thoughts about and even  if um i know your thoughts on rolling and i think   that's actually the next question but for selling  calls especially if we endure like a protracted   like grind down market what are your thoughts of  selling calls and potentially combining that with   selling something that's very far out of the money  on the put side it's gonna depend on the strategy   i think if you're doing something with rolling and  kind of managing and following positions long term   it it can make sense because you're collecting  a larger pot of premium which gives you more   room to work with you know the break evens  and everything but you know followers on   my podcast and kind of my training style no  because we're using hard stops now granted   when we use a hard stop we're going to enter again  anyway so it's kind of like a roll it's just it's   a little bit different and so specifically for  the type of training that i do i just i haven't   really found anything that works in terms of the  calls because remember when you're selling options   it's inherently a negatively skewed strategy  meaning for a particular entry your losses   are bigger than your wins so because you're  you're selling your credit the premium is your   defined profit right and but your loss is kind  of undefined so you know when people talk about   for example using selling cause as a hedge that  doesn't make as much sense to me because you're   you're giving yourself a little bit of hedging  potential but still you have upside risk now   so conceptually it just kind of goes counter to  the rest of my strategies and again specifically   because of kind of the hard stop mechanic that  i tend to use and because long term right i'm   trading longer duration 90 dte longer term market  tends to trend up right now yes you mentioned   selling cause in a bear market but it's like no  i'm not big on technical analysis i don't i don't   think i can call when is the bear market when it's  a downtrend or whatever so i can't guess so from   the experience from my testing from my own limited  experience of trading calls it just has done   me more harm than good um so it does it there's  a lot of factors not saying that's necessarily   always going to be wrong right it's we don't know  until afterwards obviously whether or not it was   right or wrong to do it now if you've been selling  calls this lasts three weeks you are doing great   right but who knows like if no i don't think  the market's going to do like a v shape like   last year this time but you know we know that  there's kind of these huge you know bear market   rallies and you know you can get your facebook  selling calls too and because of the the sku   involved like for the same delta same credit calls  are generally closer to the money than puts our   that's kind of a more of a structural aspect  of why i think they're harder to work with   um but you know and that's why that that's kind  of the culmination of why i have my opinion on   on calls it's just for me and the way i do  it it's harder to keep harder to work with   i think um i would say that selling puts  encompasses about 75 or 80 percent of my strategy   i definitely believe that there's a time and a  place to play the like the the negative delta   and the call side um you know during times when  like if tesla goes up like 20 in two days which   has happened i think like three times three  or four times over like the past year or so   i think it happened like january 7th and 8th  of like of 2021 and it also happened like just   like a few weeks ago um you know you can then  sell like a really far out of the money fall   and receive a decent amount of premium  additionally even yesterday on january 24th um   there was a situation where i was short like  a 2100 put on amazon and i was considering   simply rolling it forward by one month keeping  the same strike and then selling like a 33.50   or 3300 call on amazon that expires next week  because there is an earnings announcement and   then using that premium from the call and  from extending the duration of the put side   to then actually buy like an eighteen hundred or  nineteen hundred dollar put to provide additional   insurance and also significantly increase  the the buying power um you know in you know   reduce the buying power reduction of that  specific tree so when you were saying about   i don't necessarily think that selling calls will  be able to provide you with a significant hedge   like perhaps it'll provide you with a small hedge  if the market decreases like two to five percent   but where i do think it has value is during  periods of high volatility or when you think   a stock is oversold you can actually collect a  significant amount of premium and then you can   use that premium on the call side to then buy an  option as protection to significantly increase the   buying power in your account and i also think that  when you have a situation like last year where   the market is up 30 i think it's fair to say and  fair to predict that the market is not going to go   up 30 percent this year just because statistically  it's extremely unlikely to have it go up 30   percent you know two years in a row so i do think  that at least considering selling calls during   a year when i know that last year is independent  of this year but just statistically i just don't   necessarily see that the market is going to  go up more in which case i think having the   ability to sell calls and having that be a tool  in your toolbox could potentially be a little   bit beneficial but i definitely would 100 agree  with you that it is very risky to sell calls   especially during times after the market might be  potentially oversold because during those times   you're going to sell calls that are closer to the  current market price of the stock and the market   does have a tendency to go up extremely rapidly  we saw that happen in the third or fourth weeks   of march 2020 and a lot of people who stole calls  they did end up getting their face ripped off so   be very careful selling calls but i do think that  if used correctly then it could be something that   that adds some alpha while also it could  reduce your risk yeah i mean when used   correctly and that's the key phrase right and that  actually kind of ties back to the back testing   the trading with higher or low vix rules than with  the discretion it always comes back to if you're   going to do something that is quote unquote  situational and because it's the right time   you're adding discretion right so again if you can  follow through and own the decision and apply the   right risk management because you can't expect it  to always work right so if it works great if it   doesn't work you have to be able to to fix it or  manage it properly and not just like oh man like   like i said market shouldn't go up 30 you know  three years in a row and it's going up i mean who   knows right but like just in those situations and  like okay it can't go down or sorry it can't go up   so you know hold on to the calls and and then you  know market's going up and you're getting blown up   so you just have to with all decisions you gotta  own up to it and be prepared to manage it when you   need to the the next question is regarding rolling  um your thoughts on like just if you can quickly   recap like your thoughts on rolling for for my  audience and then um i think actually when we   when we spoke earlier we actually both kind  of agree more than disagree on on rolling so   if you can provide like a quick recap of like your  thoughts about rolling positions yeah and just to   define i mean rolling you can consider rolling  up down out and and i think most of the time   the when beginners think about rolling they talk  about kind of generally a position is threatened   and you roll out on time but same strike and  obviously that's one of various permutations   but that's kind of the one that tends to be  gravitated towards for beginners because that's   the so-called keeping the dream alive like same  strike rolling out on time hopefully for credit   but you're at the same strike so on that and  it depends really on the type of strategy   you're running and sizing sizing this is the most  important aspect because when you roll same strike   yes you buy yourself some time maybe but  you're you're kind of in the same position   in terms of the size of the trade the  probabilities don't really change just because you   you know you took one trade off and put on  another so things can compound very quickly   and i think if you don't know what you're doing  what what beginner traders tend to happen is you   know they only have enough buying power because  it's a small account for like two or three or four   trades and if they all get you know all them moved  against them they roll all of them and sooner or   later your entire buying power is used up right  so that's not the right application rolling if   you're talking about you know this kind of rolling  word same strike it's probably mostly for advanced   traders who have a very well capitalized a  very large diversified portfolio of you know   30 40 positions and maybe one or two or three of  them they can afford to kind of hold on to that   risk the rest of them either taking winners or  managing or closing out and so it's a lot harder   than most people realize um and so that that's  just this is for start i mean there's so many   things to get into but that that's the important  thing a lot of people don't realize i think   my thoughts on rolling is i  can't remember the last time i   rolled to the same strike because in general if  i'm rolling it's more for like defensive purposes   and if i'm going to roll and extend duration  i'm then going to use that premium and roll down   the strike and i'm saying roll down because  usually it's puts that end up getting challenged   because i sell mostly puts but generally  speaking if i let's say i roll forward in   time and i collect like an incremental for example  purposes like two dollars a premium in time value   you can actually allocate that premium  towards reducing your strike price   by sometimes like five dollars so in effect  you're actually reducing your strike by five   dollars or five hundred dollars per contract  yet it's only costing you two dollars   which is the amount of premium that you would  collect by rolling forward in time so i really   think that traders are doing themselves a  huge disservice by rolling forward using the   same strike and i get it if you want to capture  as much premium as possible but in my opinion   rolling is something that is very stressful having  challenged positions are also very stressful and   your primary objective when you're selling options  is that if you have a position that's challenged   i believe that your primary objective should be  to get rid of that position as quickly as possible   and from listening to your podcast i actually  do agree with you i don't necessarily think   that closing out at a 3x credit receive is a bad  strategy at all and i think that even though it   will reduce your win rate and long term it may or  may not increase or decrease your profitability   i think that one of the primary advantages of  closing out at 3x is that it reduces the amount   of stress that you're going to incur and the  amount of stress that you're going to endure and   i think that many people they underestimate  the amount of stress that they that the losses   hurt about three or four times more than the  gains feel good and as long as you can protect   yourself and protect your emotional investment  and reduce your stress i think that that alone   might actually make it worthwhile to simply  close out your trades at 3x credit received   instead of going through the hassle of rolling  yeah and another thing is this idea of win rate   uh i think in the beginning people get fixated  on that too much but what you want to focus on   is the expectancy right actual p l right win  rate itself is kind of meaningless and the idea   of rolling meaning you you never lose i mean  look i get it psychologically if you want to   consider let's say you roll 10 times and you want  to bucket that into one quarter trade and just say   oh i had a 100 win rate i mean fine you know but  really mechanically remember a trade of role is   closing one and opening another like literally  even on paper when you roll you close one so   you you lost right so but it doesn't matter like  whether or not you have 100 win rate 50 percent   when we're at 60 win rate all that matters is is  your account up or down right because when rate   doesn't you know put money on it you know put  money in your bank right expectancy is and so   rolling or you know rolling out up or down the  credit it's not something to be so fixated on   it's more about the exposure like i said do  you want to be out of the position if you   don't like that trading any longer get out if  you like the trade and you want to be exposed   to the underline but you should adjust right  rolling out rolling further rolling from into   the money to out of the money you're adjusting  the delta you're you're putting the position back   from one that has no extrinsic very little theta  to one that has more extrinsic you know and the   idea that if you somehow rolled same strike that  you didn't lose and if you've rolled out of the   money you did lose i mean it doesn't really  make any sense because once that position moves   against you your account's going down your net  look is going down you're already losing money   right when you roll or you don't roll yes there's  some cash movement in terms of like that debit or   the credit but your account balance in that moment  doesn't change there's no magic you don't auto all   of a sudden get money back or your p l doesn't pop  because you were able to roll and you got a credit   right so look at it not so much as trying to  manipulate the win rate for win rate's sake or   thinking that you're not going to lose because  you rolled because really you want to focus on   the exposure the amount of risk you have on the  table and what kind of risk do you want to have   moving forward and on a day-to-day basis and  that's you know rolling as a tool you know up or   down in or out that's about managing managing your  portfolio managing exposure managing your risk   and it's not magic it's not going to all of  a sudden make you win more or less yeah i i   definitely agree with you and i think that for me  personally one thing that i can improve upon is   trying to take ego out of the equation because  i do sometimes get too caught up in win rate   and um yeah i definitely agree with you i do  you know i i also agree with you regarding   not adding more risk to a trade um sometimes i  do that um oftentimes i don't like for example   i will sell calls as opposed to like selling  additional puts however i will say that i think   overall rolling has been a net positive to my p  l and the reason is that generally if a position   that i sell put on is challenged for the most part  it has a tendency to be oversold at that moment   and because it's a large cap company with a strong  brand it usually tends to bounce back and similar   to what you were saying previously where you have  to be comfortable or rather you have to be careful   selling calls because sometimes when something is  oversold it has a tendency or it may rip back up   and rip your face off i think that the same  logic applies to simply rolling forward   and reducing your strike price and as long as  you're not adding risk and as long as you still   have a high conviction in that trade and you don't  think that there are better opportunities for your   capital then i do think that it's okay to reduce  your strike price and add duration to simply give   yourself more time but at the same time i do  believe that for the most part even if it does   increase your p l slightly i do think that  the majority of traders should actually   have a stop loss and close out the positions  that get challenged and the primary reason for   that is i think that rolling inherently is very  stressful and i think that saving yourself and   trading a little bit of money for a reduction of  stress overall is a net positive so yeah those are   my thoughts regarding regarding rolling one one  thing keep in mind i think um so you know people   talk about survivorship bias and the fact that  you're sitting here and talking about it i assume   that means you made it you survived you didn't  blow up because it comes back to sizing right if   your everyone has different risk tolerance like  nobody wants to go through a 50 60 70 drawdown   like maybe you did maybe you didn't but if you  held on and you came back you can be like wow i   made it right like it the pnl is there because  it came back it worked but if you trade too big   or you give up or something get a margin call you  blow up like there's probably hundreds of people   that did the same thing but traded too big and the  outcome wasn't the same right so it's it's just   every portfolio strategy there's that point where  when you stress it enough it doesn't come back so   the fact that you came back i mean either through  luck or your size properly or whatever it is   you can say that and you had that experience but  there's a thousand people who it didn't work out   right so it just comes up this sizing  yeah just to play devil's advocate though   you don't eliminate the tail risk from closing  out at like 3x credit received like you still   have that gap risk yes that's true overnight so  so just to be clear like you know when the past   few days where like the s p would would open  down like 90 or something like that you're not   you're not completely immune because just because  you have a stop loss or a stop limit right   one number that doesn't mean you're getting filled  with that number and that's that's where it comes   down to do you want to do you need that secondary  backup that that's where that kind of blacks   on hedge comes and that's why you know what's  interesting there's so many pieces to take it   you know to look at it it's not just like a it's  not a simple decision right there's a lot of   moving parts so number one how big are you trading  number two what your mechanics are number three   do you actually like you said no amount no  strategy is gonna be completely immune from that   black swan risk that's why if you're gonna trade  in size either way rolling or no rolling if you   trade in size you're gonna need something or you  should have something in case there is that kind   of account obliterating kind of event right like  i said none of us are immune to that and that's   why i do have a black swan hedge right even though  i don't believe it's ever good nor do i ever want   it to be needed right i don't want there to be a  20 gap or whatever um but just in case and so and   again that's just one piece of the puzzle right  and it's not and again coming back to regardless   of what you're trading how you're trading rolling  or stops and it just comes down to the size and   whether or not it's appropriate to have because  if you're trading cash secured no leverage   you can roll however long you want it's never  going to go to zero you know there is no black   swan can happen and most likely you know maybe you  have 50 drawdown just wait for it to come back but   once you start training leverage the notional you  know becomes 2x 3x it doesn't matter like you said   right everyone's subject to the same thing yeah  do we have time for one more question yeah sure   okay what are your thoughts about using  spx or spy versus individual equities   that gets into the blacks one risk  actually because what earnings and   outlier events with underlying symbols yes  there's more volatility and more juice in the   options than rightly so because of the risk so  if you're gonna run a you know again if you're   if you're well capitalized and you're able  to trade multiple underlyings and so that   one outlier doesn't blow you up i think it's okay  but generally for me it's just less of a headache   to deal you know number one you don't have to  worry about earnings when you avoid individual   symbols you don't have the idiosyncratic risk  and you can just focus on one product right   and for example like you know the theta engine  strategy that i trade right i'm just doing spy spx   it's almost a kind of a pseudo-rolling strategy  yes we have stops when we get out but when we get   stopped out we just keep entering every day  or whatever it is it's almost like a pseudo   you know i'm always recycling the capital  capitals always being put back and taken out   so sometimes it's just like packaged differently  right but it uses the same kind of concepts um   but that's kind of by choice and i get like if  somebody wants to and that comes down to the   discretionary versus mechanical right if you if  you like to quote unquote look for opportunities   or oh this earnings is coming up or something  happened here that iv spiked and you know kind   of like with tastytrade and what tom always  says about like sell any high ivr underlying   and just be pro prognostic it's like i mean  that's okay but realize that there is risk   and the difficulty that comes with that territory  and if you make that choice to engage in that you   have to be ready to deal with the consequences so  you know that's something to keep in mind yeah i   i'm kind of in in the middle between you and  tom i think that tom pretty much encouraging   sell equities with high ivr and indiscriminately  sell them and keep like 80 or 90 positions on   i just would never be able to handle that and i  think that because you do have correlation risk   especially during periods of pullback i think that  that would cause many people to either blow up   their accounts or to just get so stressed out that  they would eventually end up quitting so i'm kind   of in the middle where i will only sell options  and yes sometimes i do sell options on spx and sp   but i primarily target large cap liquid underlines  with strong brands like microsoft or amazon   you know even something that has relatively low  beta or that's slightly quote unquote recession   proof like a dollar general or like a dltr but  on my watch list i really only have like 10 or   15 securities and precisely for the same reason  as you mentioned it just makes it easier and it   kind of like standardizes it i'm not really a  big fan of you know just scanning based upon   ivr and then discriminately selling so i guess i'm  probably closer to you in that respect and that   line of thought than i am to to tom and um i guess  um just this is the very last question regarding   um what do you believe that many that many traders  should be like long spy or qs instead of leaving   uh cash available to withdraw instead of holding  cash when using portfolio margin and then   margining off of that long equity position what  are your thoughts on that well i think you know   obviously the answer from having heard the podcast  and people who listen to my pockets and everything   but obviously it depends on your timeline and  your risk tolerance but you know if you believe   the market goes up long term which i do then i  think it makes sense to at least have some portion   allocated and i think what you're alluding to with  the portfolio margin this is the return stacking   concept that i've mentioned now you don't have to  have portfolio margin but it works a lot better   on portfolio margin equity takes a  lot less buying power you can have   you know 100 000 and spy and it really only uses  like 10 000 of buying power you have the rest of   the buying power to sell options do whatever you  want and this idea of combining passive returns   and active returns i think makes sense again  it's it's yes they're all correlated but it   diversifies the need to do all the work yourself  right if if we believe the market can do five six   seven ten percent long-term passive why don't we  go get that few percent i mean and you don't have   to allocate fully even half allocated quarter  allocated you you're letting the market do some   of the work there's some benefits it's more tax  efficient you know if you're not buying selling   those gains are unrealized there's dividends i  mean like i said there's if we believe the market   adds value over time why not capture some of it  with no work right that's that's kind of the idea   i agree with you 100 and that is something  that i was not doing in the past and i will   actually start implementing that once i believe  that the market is stabilized a little bit um   because i think that that's an amazing way to um  to get some like some passive returns while also   juicing those returns by selling options the only  caveat to that is because you are going to have   some correlation risk by being long that equity or  along that into that index then i would probably   uh for at least well at least for myself i will  actually trade a little bit less and reduce the   number of contracts you know maybe by like  10 or 20 percent in total that way if the   market corrects by 20 or 30 percent then i'm not  experiencing like a quote unquote double whammy by   taking losses on the long equity position and also  having to defend the short option contracts i will   add one last thing and um i don't know i didn't  get into this on my podcast what i kind of did   on the return stacking episode but this isn't  so much about necessarily long spire long qqq   it's just about the idea of stacking returns  right if you're going to have a core portfolio   and leverage that margin to trade options once  you have that idea you can take it and run with it   you don't have to do spy only right there's risk  parity portfolios you can blend stocks and bonds   tlt you know there's dual momentum strategies  there's different things the idea is just   having a core portfolio and being able to run  options in parallel that's the big idea it's   they don't have to be you don't have to be  all equities or all options you can do both   and combine them and you know people say there's  nothing free in life that that actually is the   only free money portfolio margin is the only  free money it's free leverage now i'm not saying   do huge leverage and do something risky in  bloodborne account that's what i'm saying   right when i'm talking about leverage i'm on  the fact that you can marry these two strategies   and that's just the way the margin works and  you can essentially have two things running in   parallel that can be very incorrect if you decide  to do some kind of you know stable portfolio like   like i said like a 60 40 or some  kind of risk parity or something   it is in fact possible to have that core be  not so correlated to your option strategy so   just something to think about just take that  idea and run it with it i think that's kind   of the powerful concept and the takeaway from  all that so you're saying like allocate some   portion to equity or an index but additionally  to like tlt or something that's not correlated   and then because you have essentially free  leverage from using pm then that could juice   your returns and also reduce your risk from just  an option from a short option only portfolio   yeah just the idea that you can put the options  on top of that and that that was just one example   because i'm not like i said i haven't looked  into that myself i'm not that well versed but it   just different ways of modeling portfolios and  different cores that you know apparently have been   shown to have very little correlation with the  market and yet still have pretty strong returns   and there's a whole world out there you can  explore in that aspect um that you can find online   all right i i really hope that you guys found this  incredibly valuable i um i reached out to David   because i felt like combining the heads of the  two Davids the two david dragons would be able to   be incredibly valuable for everyone and i'm gonna  post this on on um you know on my social media and   i'll post the link to David Sun's podcast and uh  his facebook group as well and i highly encourage   you guys to check him out his podcast is amazing  and whether you agree with my with like what i   encouraged you a little bit more subjectivity or  David's more objectivity the primary purpose of   this talk was just to give you something to think  about and something to consider so irrespective   of whether you agree with me or or him or both  of us it's just something to think about we're   just sharing knowledge so we hope that you found  this valuable yeah and based on feedback you   know maybe we'll we'll line up to do this again  and with other questions sometime but uh thanks   for reaching out and appreciating the time looking  for talking again thank you guys so much take care

2022-02-07 04:26

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