swissaustrian
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The following is a copy of a post, I originally made after the big silver crash back in may 2011 at Ron Paul Forums: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?292691-How-to-trade-the-commodities-VOLATILITY
I think it´s offering a useful strategy for traders. I made some minor adjustments to the original post.
Note: The following text should not be interpreted as a professional investment advice. Make you own decisions and be sure to fully understand every product you buy.
We see huge volatility in commodities right now.
My opinion is that this is gonna continue for a while.
I trade options regularly and i want to share an investment idea with you. Here is how you trade when you know there are going to be major movements in prices, but you can´t really figure out in which direction they are going to be. In other words: you trade the volatility. Your expectation is that prices won´t stay at the same levels.
Luckily www.optionsguide.com offers a good description of the trade, so I don´t need to write everything down on my own. The trade is called long guts:
From http://www.theoptionsguide.com/long-guts.aspx:
I would suggest to buy silver-options because this market is the most volatile one.
If you are generally bullish but you want to hedge to the downside, you should basicly do the the same as above but with a 2:1 call/put-ratio. This is called "strap" ( http://www.theoptionsguide.com/strap.aspx)
I think it´s offering a useful strategy for traders. I made some minor adjustments to the original post.
Note: The following text should not be interpreted as a professional investment advice. Make you own decisions and be sure to fully understand every product you buy.
We see huge volatility in commodities right now.
My opinion is that this is gonna continue for a while.
I trade options regularly and i want to share an investment idea with you. Here is how you trade when you know there are going to be major movements in prices, but you can´t really figure out in which direction they are going to be. In other words: you trade the volatility. Your expectation is that prices won´t stay at the same levels.
Luckily www.optionsguide.com offers a good description of the trade, so I don´t need to write everything down on my own. The trade is called long guts:
From http://www.theoptionsguide.com/long-guts.aspx:
The long guts is a neutral strategy in options trading that involve the simultaneous buying of an in-the-money call option and an in-the-money put option of the same underlying stock and expiration date.
Long Guts Construction
Buy 1 ITM Call
Buy 1 ITM Put
This is an unlimited profit, limited risk strategy that is taken when the options trader thinks that the underlying stock will experience significant volatility in the near term. The long guts is a debit spread as a net debit is taken to enter the trade.
Unlimited Profit Potential
Large gains for the long guts strategy is attained when the underlying stock price makes a very strong move either upwards or downwards at expiration. The move in the underlying stock price must be strong enough such that either the long call or the long put rise enough in value to offset the loss incurred by the other option expiring worthless.
The formula for calculating profit is given below:
•Maximum Profit = Unlimited
•Profit Achieved When Price of Underlying < Strike Price of Long Put - Net Premium Paid OR Price of Underlying > Long Call + Net Premium Paid
•Profit = Price of Underlying - Strike Price of Long Call - Net Premium Paid OR Strike Price of Long Put - Price of Underlying - Premium Paid
Limited Risk
Maximum loss for the long guts strategy occurs when the underlying stock price on expiration date is trading between the strike prices of the options bought. At this price, while both options expire in the money, they have lost all their time value. It is this loss in time value that is the cost of employing the long guts strategy.
The formula for calculating maximum loss is given below:
•Max Loss = Net Premium Paid + Strike Price of Long Put - Strike Price of Long Call + Commissions Paid
•Max Loss Occurs When Price of Underlying is in between the Strike Prices of the Long Call and the Long Put
I would suggest to buy silver-options because this market is the most volatile one.
If you are generally bullish but you want to hedge to the downside, you should basicly do the the same as above but with a 2:1 call/put-ratio. This is called "strap" ( http://www.theoptionsguide.com/strap.aspx)