Another Way To Play The Volatility

Got a great email from a member about how he made some quick profits from the recent volatility…

“Allen,
 
I had a wonderful two days with this volatility, by changing your procedure slightly.
 
The changes I implemented are:
 
1. When it looks like we are in a bearish market, do only the bearish call spread and NOT the bullish put spread. Do the converse when in a bullish market.
 
2. In a volailte market that whipsaws, do not close out both the high and low strikes simultaneously. Rather close out the short position first, since that is the one costing us the maintenance requirement. The long position has no impact on the maintenace margin requirement.
 
This is what happened:
 
On Thursday May 06, being my birthday, I wanted to try my luck at Day Trading with options, since the market looked quite volatile!
 
Did a RUT May 720/730 bearish call spread. Bought the 730 call at 2.39 and [...]

Tags: ,
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education, Trades and Adjustments | 2 Comments »

Iron Condors and Volatility

Question:

In your lesson you said that volatility is not good for options trading since you trade within  a statistical mean. If you do condor trades don’t you need volatility?  Won’t you make more money or will out of the money be the same at any price?

My answer:

The higher the volatility, the higher the option prices.
But in a condor, volatility is not as important as price action.
If volatility drops, we can exit the condor trade faster. But if it rises it just means we have to be in the trade longer. Volatility is more important in trades like calendars where it can destroy the trade if it drops too much.

Tags: ,
Posted in Option Strategies, Options Education | No Comments »