- It tracks an index so I don't have to worry about individual earnings or dividends - it moves with the market
- Although the% margin requirement is higher, it's about 10x cheaper to enter a position than using SPX (the actual S&P 500 index)
- It trades above $100. It's actually closer to $200. This is important since commissions are high enough to set a minimum on the options I can trade. If the price is too low, then all my potential profits are going towards commissions.
- It has high volume which means high liquidity - the bid-ask spreads aren't atrocious here compared to other choices.
Looking at the bids, the Put would get me around $1.21 while the Call would give me $0.24. This worried me as entering a Strangle with those credits would give me a ~68.2% chance of max profit while having a 74.6% of any profit. Knowing that the Call side premium wasn't really high, I did the same calculation for just the Put. A short Put at $187 would have an 83.5% chance of max profit and am 86.3% chance of any profit. So by reducing my max profits by 15.4% ($1.43 to $1.21) I increased my chance of max profit by 15.3% and chance of any profit by 11.7%. Since I liked those odds, that's what I did.
To recap the trade I sold to open (STO):
- Trade date: Septeber 18, 2015
- SPY at $196.74
- DTE: 25
- October 16, 2015 monthly IV: 19.45%
- Trade: STO 1 October 16 SPY Put @ 1.30 (I ended up getting more than the number I used in my calculations)