Showing posts with label options. Show all posts
Showing posts with label options. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Open Positions

Currently, we have on a few positions that I'd like to note as some are now gaining traction and others are languishing in the depths

All in the EuroDollar Complex: {#GE_f}

9912.5 Straddle in March 2014
  • Last post I mentioned that we were long the green March {2014} 9912.5 straddle. We originally initiated this trade when it was very close to ATM {vs. 9913.5}. Our thought process was that we might be able to get a run up, or down, in the greens and we would then have a chance to scalp the gamma. As it turned out, we bounced up to 9927 and as a result, we sold deltas the entire way up. Now the greens are starting to pull back while the euphoria of a stalling 3-month LIBOR is beginning to wain and it's time to do an inventory of where we're at:
  • Hedges: We sold deltas at 14, 16, 19.5, 22, and 24 {equally} for an average short of ~9919
  • As we approach that level again, we'll be looking to buy back some of these higher sales and to subsequently place GTC's to the upside.
 9900-9937.5 Put Spread in June 2012
  • We bought this purely as an insurance policy against Europe. Our entry level was 3.5 ticks vs 9948 in the June '12 futures. Locals had a 22 delta on it at the time of execution.
  • Our thought process was two fold: Cheap-ish price for a 10:1 payout and we've noticed that as the time passes and/or we drift higher, this type of structure actually ages very well {code for it doesn't lose its value instantly}
  • Since we're using this as a macro hedge to our book, we didn't execute any deltas vs 9948. Our first buy will be ~9943.5 but, we intend on keeping it significantly under hedged so as to fully capture any type of front-end credit event. {Greeks missing their end of March bond payment?}
 Just a peak at what we like. I think you're able to still execute both of these strategies relatively close to the our levels if you're so inclined. Obviously, we have others and my hope is to write about a few of our futures plays tomorrow.

A bit of housekeeping. The Philosophical Rail Defender has requested a name change. I guess that since he's no longer on the floor, it no longer makes sense to think of him on the rail...who knew? At any rate, I've added him as an author on here under the acronym EDUB. Maybe it sticks.

~LH

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Execution that hurts

Yesterday, on the 1.25 point sell off in the US {30 year} we decided to play the 'mean reversion' game and take a shot at getting long some upside calls.

We purchased the December {Z} 137 calls for 20 ticks. Our motiviation was as follows:

1. We are currently at the 60 day support level in the USZ {roughly 130}
2. We are anticipating a stock sell-off as well as the corresponding bond rally following next week's supposed QE2 announcement.
3. A trusted adviser taught me that when all else fails and you have no idea what to do, buy gamma.
{they're currently priced at 11-12}

Other things we've done or rolled out of.

1. We have taken 75% of our E0X 91-93 put spread off. We purchased it for 3.5 and have sold it for an average price of just under 5 ticks.

2. EDU v FFU, we purchased 28.5s in the spread and sold 31.5 and 32s {completely exiting the trade}

Finally, my Philosophical rail Defender alerted me to the following theory about the Nov 3rd announcement. Fascinating opinion. {this text comes directly from an IM conversation}

So here is my 10 delta prediction, {we'll get} no explicit announcement of QE, stocks tank, PIMPCO takes it on the chin and puts back {their long book of} MBS to Bank of America. The Govt does a Citi/GM style bailout with BAC. {As a result} Geithner gets ousted {and either} El Erian or Gross will move into the drivers seat at Treasury. They will then propose a bailout of state pensions via the Treasury issuing 100 year bonds at 6 pct in a swap for all pension assets. Then the Fed continues to stealthily purchase everything not nailed down.

~LH

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Booking Expectations

The addition of the newest office member has added an exponential increase in our trade idea generation. Though we have been substantially quiet in many of our markets, it hasn't been for lack of ideas, rather we're experiencing a total lack of conviction. As I type now we're in the midst of another spectacular bull session for the Euros. LIBOR has downticked to a paltry .28906%. In the last 15 trading days, the Green December ED {2012}has rally almost 40 ticks. The expectations of long term QE are all but assumed to be relevant from now through the 2012 calendar.

We're stuck with the questions of how profit in the zero interest rate vacuum. How do craft an option play that capitalizes on the market's perceived risks {that the market continues to drift toward zero? Over the past few days large ED customers have been buying thousands of EZ2 9925 calls at 1 {>30K}as well as the EZ2 9900-9925 call spreads at 4.5 and 5 {>40K}. Seriously!?! That's 40 ticks away and has 65 days til expiration. That's unbelievable. Though given the the last 15 days, it doesn't seem like much of a stretch huh?

Now we're drifting higher in price, lower in yield. The markets can't keep rocking higher, can they? What happens when QE2 gets released?

One of the more poignant arguments I've stumbled across lately is in a Bianco research piece. This piece focused on the amount of QE2 and hinges off of a Bill Dudley speech recently given to the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Dudley stated that "$500 billion of purchases would provide about as much stimulus as a reduction ion the federal funds rate of between half a point and three quarters of a point." They then surmised that Dudley reached this conclusion by using the Taylor Rule to approximate a neutral funds rate.

"Using core PCE as a measure of inflation, the Taylor Rule places the neutral funds rate at -1.50%...With the fed funds rate essentially at 0%, the Federal Reserve has used asset purchases as a means to further decrease rates. These purchases have created almost $1 trillion in excess reserves as of 9/22. Taking Dudley's statement at face value, $1 trillion in excess reserves has already pushed the "implied funds rate" to somewhere between -1.00% and -1.50%. A further $500 billion in QE would push the rate to somewhere between -1.50% and -2.25%." {http://www.arborresearch.com/biancoresearch/}

Ouch, especially for our market. Maybe the large ED customers have read this idea too and are hedging best they can. Can you actually get negative interest rates?

~LH

Monday, September 20, 2010

Sizing up my opponent

Mid-September and I have plenty of irons in the fire. Yet the daily grind in the Fed Funds is slow and sometimes arduous.  The idea of growing our single accounts into a larger, more macro-focused trading vehicle has begun to effect my thoughts and the process by which I believe trade creation occurs. The Greek philosopher Heraclitus wrote, "Nothing endures but change." {We often hear it translated just a bit differently as, "Change is the only constant."} My newer approach is to pull back from the one tree from which I'm picking apples and take a look around me to see if there is any low-hanging fruit on another trees nearby. Why strain for the next marginal piece of fruit in my tree when there is a perfectly good piece of easy fruit on the tree right next to you? All that to say, I want to expand the book and create a greater exposure and presence markets that relate to the FF.

I've been at this long enough to know that most of my trades don't just appear out of nothing. A majority are created out of a calculated premise, a lengthy discussion and the intangible of experience. However, if we are to aim towards a more macro goal, I think the process can shift to a round table conversation where we answer the following questions:
  1. Where do I think we're going tomorrow in the products that we trade?
  2. What is the best trade for tomorrow?
  3. What is the best trade for the next few weeks {3-6}?
  4. What is the best trade for the quarter?
 I don't necessarily have the answers to any {all} of those questions at any given point, but collectively the answers will emerge. What I've described is the goal. How we actually go about getting to that point; well that's the adventure.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
I want to shift gears a bit and just briefly lay out some of the trades we've been working on over the last few weeks and months.
  • In the FF we've been selling the 87/93 call spreads in December and February. We've been able to collect between .75 and 1 tick {1 tick = $41.67} and though they aren't "make your month" trades, they do help us finance our other positions.
  • We've sold the March 68/75/81 put tree {-1, -1, +1} and collected an average of 1 tick. This trade leaves us short two downside puts and long one put that is currently ATM. If nothing happens in the Fed's policies or rates for the next few months OR we move higher in price {lower yields} we will simply collect our tick and be done with it. If however, we start to move lower, we're long a put spread with 1 naked short put below. The break even for this trade is roughly 9961.
  • We've also done the May 68/75/81 put tree as describe above. However, we were able to collect an average of 2.75 ticks to sell the two legs and buy the one. The thought process and the theoretical payout is very similar.
  • We have purchased the EDH {March 11} 92/95 {9925/9950} put spread in the Euro Dollars. Partially as a hedge against our FF put trees and partly to allow some credit risk exposure. Our thinking was if another European nation even hints at some type of sovereign wealth issue, the ED will react much more violently than the FF. We paid an average of 4.5 ticks {1 tick = $25}. The maximum this trade is worth is 25 ticks {less entry costs} giving us a very nice 5x1 on our money if it hits.
As far as what is out there but not quite ripe enough to pick? I think that the NOB is getting very attractive as a short position. The yield curve has been pricing in some type of QE2 coming out of tomorrow's FOMC meeting just as they did back in August. However, I find it difficult to believe that they will announce any type of easing coming out of an FOMC meeting. Perhaps they tweak the language, but nothing more. The chart below shows the generic NOB contract as generated by the CME. From its last top to the most recent bottom was nearly 80 ticks. At $156 per tick, that's a profit of ~$6,000 per one lot. I'm not sure how to best capture the pricing currently in the market. My gut says to get long USX {30 year Nov} put spreads and sell TYX put spreads for near zero cash outlay.



 ~LH