Systematic Options Trading - Minimizing Risk Exposure & Optimizing Edge · David Sun

Systematic Options Trading - Minimizing Risk Exposure & Optimizing Edge · David Sun

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markets speculation and risk this  is the chat with Traders podcast we're on episode 248 and I'm Ian host of Chat  With Traders and we're going to mix things   up just a little bit today where Tessa will  be interviewing Our Guest David Sun David's   background is in electrical engineering but  he got turned on to options trading over the   years and appeared on the tasty trade show as  a rising star guest with a talent for options   trading he then went on to start his first  hedge fund in 2018 and then added a second   one in 2021. in this interview Tessa discusses an  overview of David's systematic options trading it   has to do with a multi-layer approach using  stop losses which is not common in options   trading and even advised against and how David  takes advantage of high implied volatility not   in the way most option Traders would think and  his take on managing the win size to loss size   ratio this episode assumes that you do have  some basic level of options trading knowledge   so options Traders I think you're in for a treat  and May Come Away with some actionable ideas by   the way David will make an appearance  inside the chat with Traders Community   where I will dive deeper with David into the  mechanics of his strategy please join us in   this live online discussion on December 7th go  to community on the chat with Trader's website   to join we hope to see you there we would now  like to introduce you to Our Guest David Sun hi David welcome to chat with Traders  hey Tessa thanks for having me on   yes it's very good to have you on um we have  a lot to cover and why don't we just dive into   it now but before we get into the the nuts and  bolts of things I usually like to hear a little   bit more about the human side of Traders so if  you don't mind can you just share it with us a   little bit about yourself your background yeah  no no problem so my backgrounds actually uh in   electrical engineering so that's my education  and so I don't have a formal Finance background   um I got into options when I was actually doing  my masters and it was a buddy at grad school that   got me a new options at the time I I randomly  just wanted to get in the market because I think   it was like the 2008 2009 time so obviously the  the markets and the stock market in general was   kind of on people's minds whether or not they  were you know into trading um and at the time   I had no knowledge you know I was just randomly  watching CNBC and like following Jim Cramer and   just picking stocks and so my my buddy got me into  options interestingly enough actually from the   point of view of selling options because I know  people get into it tend to get into as buyers of   options and almost like speculating directionally  so I was actually selling puts very early on For   Better or For Worse and again not knowing really  anything and just kind of blindly selling puts   um I wasn't even rolling I was just like picking  based on how much premium I wanted thinking like   hey um uh if I collect this amount premium then  I can make this percent and I think occasionally   uh if it did get challenged I would like he was  like hey you can rule for a credit so it was very   unsophisticated and uh the bad thing is it  worked for a couple of years so you know made   a decent amount but then at some point the  market turned and I gave a bunch of it back   um so I got a little disillusioned and uh I kind  of stopped doing it for a bit but I had a friend   who was also trying to get into the market or  just doing research on stuff because he knew I   was in options so he introduced me to tastytrade  and this was in 2017. so that was I guess the   beginning of like kind of the the reinvigoration  of of my interest in options um because if people   follow taster trade at all they know that it's  kind of retail oriented there's a lot of content   um a lot of stuff to learn you can just  host drinking all up and that in terms of   the learning curve was kind of  what accelerated things for me   um so I started kind of getting a little better  and I got confident enough you know this was like   a year and a half in that I I was doing well and  something gave me the idea that hey it'll be cool   if I could scale up what I'm doing and I was like  well if I could do this for others and just kind   of keep trading but I can make money doing it you  know I basically started a hedge fund in late 2018   um did that you know that was going well  I started a second hedge fund in 2021 and   so you know it's been four years and so I've been  kind of just continually pushing my own knowledge   and developing strategies and you know that was  kind of just a trajectory yeah so that was like a   uh from beginning to end probably like a 10-year  Journey 10 plus years at this point and that's   that's kind of the very high level quick quick  fly through so from electrical engineer to   options Trader now hedge fund manager yes I  wanted to back up just a little bit before   options trading did you just trade stocks at  all or you just went straight into options so   I picked stocks for like a couple months because  as I mentioned that was around the time I was in   grad school and I was telling my friend about  it and he got me into options so I basically   dropped stocks pretty quickly I mean it was  still uh involved in the sense that I sold   puts on what I would have bought stocks on and  again very unsophisticated it was literally like   see what Jim Cramer mentioned or pick five random  socks or it was like apple and Visa or like uh   you know just just and then just selling a put  and then doing that so yeah I wasn't trading   stocks from early on it was basically just selling  options for after like two or three months of you   know quote-unquote trying to learn the market  because that was kind of like uh what people   usually start out with when they when they first  trade options right on the sell side they usually   sell puts that's kind of a popular thing to do  is that true once you get past the buying kind   of cause to speculate on the upside or buying puts  selling puts and especially cash the card puts one   of the kind of the intro strategies is like the  wheel which is basically selling cash secured   puts which is selling a put on a stock where you  have enough funds to take assignment and buy 100   shares of that stock if you know if if it's put to  you or gets to signed and then turning around and   you know selling covered calls against the shares  so I think that's kind of the introductory or like   the first quote-unquote first strategy is that  you know new Option Traders will learn right yeah   so I I'd like to ask some questions about your  hedge fund the reason is because we've had great   episodes so far that mentioned the use of options  to trade or use them as part of a hedging of a   portfolio or options seems to be uh widely used in  hedge funds but I don't know if we've taken time   to pick one or two strategies and really break  it down far enough at the level where even though   these can be Advanced and in complex strategies  in in some of these hedge funds um I think us   reach retail Traders can still get some ideas to  possibly really you know play with and experiment   with more to be able to implement into our own  strategies so I'd love to get into a bit a little   bit about that and why start a hedge fund are  you a Founder owner or you just manage hedge fund   um both actually so a hedge fund is essentially  just like a a broader investment vehicle so   there's a number of parties that pull their  capital and it's set up kind of like a limited   partnership so all the people investors who are  just providing Capital not their limited partners   and I am a general partner which essentially  trades the account it's all commingled funds just   kind of like an administrator that does the books  and allocates the profits uh proportionally to   each partner so basically everybody gets the same  return regardless of how much they've invested and   so this kind of structure is a way to manage a  large pool of capital without having to trade   multiple accounts so some people might be familiar  with something called smas or separately managed   accounts where you're kind of giving somebody a  manager access third-party access to your personal   account so they trade in your account and they  have something where they do a strategy and you   know the trades get kind of pushed to all of the  different accounts at the appropriate size but you   know each if Master still kind of keeps control of  the funds and they can see what's going on whereas   a hedge fund it's called mingled and that makes  it easier that's my preference because you can   think of as trading one large account as opposing  multiple small ones and for Capital efficiency and   margining it just kind of works more easily  but to answer your question yes I started   found it if you will and also manage kind of  too too small I mean don't get me wrong I'm not   Ray dalio I'm not managing hundreds of billions  of dollars there's a relatively very small and   the grand scheme of things but it's kind of a  similar setup yeah I I asked because it takes a   certain mindset to be able to go from Trader just  a regular Trader and then now to open up a hedge   fund it tells me that you have an entrepreneurial  you know side of you it's it's hard it's hard to   be able to do that right to manage the business  and also the money would you be willing to   um describe some of your main bread and butter  hedge fund strategy that you're using uh the   kind of uh regulation that we operate under  is we can't do public marketing so to speak   and we can't raise capital in public and talk  specifically about performance and stuff but I   do share overarching philosophies and general  strategies maybe not exactly the way they're   set up right in the fund but like I said you  even went through my own podcast which I think   you've heard a couple episodes of like I share  kind of different facets and and the approaches   and ideas behind them and so I'll give kind  of an overarching philosophy behind the two   funds and like what the approach is and so one  of them is using options as a tool to combine   with traditional Buy and Hold so you know people  talk about long-term passive investing if you're   buying a whole spy right the S P 500 ETF you're  gonna get the market returns and it's passive   and you'll get you know nine to ten percent  return a year or whatever it is which is great   um but once you do that right it's a passive  approach and you're pretty much subject to the   whims of the market and you take what the market  gives but with options and the way because they're   Capital efficient and the way they're margin  you can essentially run an option strategy   on top of a a passive Buy and Hold portfolio  and it's basically an overlay so if you think   about it if you were to run option strategy and  even Target some very small return one two three   percent whatever it is and you can consistently  do that and that's basically stacked on top of   your Buy and Hold You know whatever your core it  doesn't even have to be s p just whatever you want   to typically do as a you know uh stock investor  you're basically just adding that return on top   right so basically you get to kind of enhance the  return if you will so that's the approach of one   it's like you have some core portfolio and you  can consider that like a personal benchmarking   view or something that you'd have regardless  and if you can just add a little bit on top   you're essentially kind of enhancing the yield  um and so options is that the tool to basically   overlay a strategy um and then the other fund is  kind of more of a pure option strategy we don't   have any underlying no equities or stocks and  it's kind of a rather than a benchmark approach   it's considered an absolute return right  we're just trying to generate some Target   um or some level of return regardless of what the  overall Market or any other benchmarks are doing   and it is using pure option strategies so okay so  these are the two what you the two those are the   uh approaches I haven't gotten to the strategy  specific ship which we can dive into one of   them but that's kind of I wanted to give a high  level of kind of the approach and what you can   do in kind of my vision for how you know because  different funds have you know different mandates   or different strategies or different philosophies  or kind of what they're trying to do and that's   kind of the two approaches that that we happen to  have yeah I'd love to dive into um each of those   two approaches that would be great and would love  to know too because we just had a recent episode   on episode 242 uh where we had Chris Studio on  as a guest and he described you know some of the   approach in in his hedge fund strategy to using  options more like I think like an insurance right   um you know with the long Vol trade and also  mentioned the other side of it having absolute   an absolute return strategy like the one that you  just mentioned I would love to also understand   what the main differences are in what you're  doing yeah so it's kind of interesting and   this is a good example of what I meant about kind  of different mandates so Chris's fund is meant to   be a tail hedge protection for no an institution  or somebody that has some other portfolio that   they want to protect right and so they would  allocate some Capital to Chris's fund as kind of   the insurance policy and in his fund uh he broke  it down to where they have one part that is the   hedging you know or buy and put options on S P or  whatever else that's meant to be the protection   but he used the example when you pay for insurance  there's always a cost right and there's the bleed   so if you want large protection you're going to  pay a large cost and if you pay a large cost in   you know this event or whatever you're protecting  is never manifest then you basically have no   benefit it's just money down the drain right so  to offset that bleed to the extent possible there   they run some other option strategies on the side  that's kind of the absolute return strategy and   they're using that to quote unquote Finance the  cost of hedging and so what happens is in his   kind of product you don't really expect a return  so to speak because the under normal circumstances   the options you know the income from the absolute  return strategy it's just going to go offset the   bleed from the Hedge so the you know you're not  going to get like a profit from allocating with   him on enormous circumstance but the reason you  do so is because if you can that if you can get   that quote unquote free hedge then when the event  does happen you know his fund is designed to have   a large payout you know a few hundred percent  so you get that large return on investment   um and so the Mandate and kind of the risk  profile of it if you think of his fun as   just a product right because you know what are  ETFs and mutual funds they're fun they're just   products so hedge funds are just you know private  funds but that's kind of his approach whereas   um the second fund I mentioned for us is whereas  we just have because we do short-term trading   we're not we're not trying to have some kind of  large convex or tail hedge profile we're just   trying to generate you know uh some return that's  irrespective you know uncorrelated to the overall   market so that's kind of one way to kind of  compare and contrast or just think of funds   as different products right uh but we're just not  ones you can go out and buy on you know on the   exchange right it's not something like ticker  symbol we can trade interesting okay so let's   um yeah I would love to learn more about this um  second hedge fund first because since you just   mentioned it can we break that down a little bit  more yeah so the approach that we take and just   to be clear that both the first and second fund  use the same types of strategies as the return   or the options portion the only difference in why  the return profile still difference because the   first one uses you know index funds for example  as a base and options are kind of a small piece   to sort of enhance that whereas if you separate  those drop the index funds and just focus on   options and size that up you get a certain return  on that and so one thing I kind of want to point   out is that again options are just tools right you  can size them up or down and use them in different   ways in conjunction with other you know pieces  of your portfolio to design an overall profile   um so if that makes sense like you know again what  what Chris is doing with our second one our first   one it's it's our options but how you use it and  when you use it that's what makes a difference   but let's talk about kind of our approach on  options because when we saw options um and I   know your audience uh probably is mostly familiar  with stock trading so they may not have intimate   knowledge of like Greeks and stuff so we'll try  to keep it very basic well we'll mention that you   know Greeks are something you have to be aware  of but you don't have to kind of dive into how   they're calculating everything but when you sell  a put for example depending on where you choose   the track price and there's a Delta involved  with every option and Delta very simply is just   a measure of how much an option price will move  for every uh dollar move of the actual underlying   but when you look at options and look at option  chain the Delta can be kind of a a proxy of the   probability of profit or the probability that  that option will expire in the money at expiration   and so if you have some probability of success  and the thing is a lot of new traders who get   into option selling they always want to focus  on high win rate or high pop you know probably   a profit and so they'll sell these far out of  the money options that presumably will have a   80 win rate or 90 win rate but the issue with this  kind of approach is because options are non-linear   what happens is you have a high win rate of  winning some small defined amount but when they   move against you they can move against you very  heavily so you could have like a five x multiple   loss or 10x multiple loss and so it doesn't matter  if you have a high win rate if when you lose you   lose big right you basically give it all back so  what I set out to do was using different mechanics   I wanted to fix that when to loss ratio  so I used kind of a simple example   if I sold an option and I clicked it we'll  just use round numbers a hundred dollars   that's your maximum potential profit right you  can't make any more than a hundred dollars but   you can lose a lot more and two simple mechanics  I'll do one no we will close the option at a   certain profit right because we don't there's  risk involved with holding them all the way to   expiration so let's say I want to capture sixty  percent of the profit and so this is a little   thing where when people are selling options they  have to learn to kind of turn things around I've   sold something and I've collected this credit  of hundred dollars to kind of enter the position   so if I if that option decays and the Press  goes down and I buy it back or buy to close   for 40 right so I collected 60 and I paid 40. my  net profit is 60 right which is 60 of my original   Max profit of 100. does that make sense yes okay  now that's taking a profit on a winner so on the  

other side we've mentioned that options can move  largely against you so I don't want to risk a   5x loss or 10x loss so let's say I want to cap  my loss at 200 percent right so if I'm maximum   profit is a hundred dollars because that's what  I collected and I'm not willing to lose net more   than two hundred dollars what I'll do is I will  stop out or buy back the option if it goes to a   price of 300. so if we step back if I sold it for  a hundred but I paid 300 to close out and get out   of the trade I've netted a loss of 200 or 2x does  that make sense okay so this creates a very simple   win-loss ratio right if I win you know sixty  percent on a winner and I lose 200 on a loser   it's like a roughly a risk three to make one  right so you've just defined your max loss yes   in practice and and people talk about like what if  there's a big gap or what if you can't get out at   that price those are all real considerations but  just from a theoretical standpoint you're right   I have basically defined my win loss ratio win  size to loss size ratio risk to return so to speak   and so in my podcast um I talk about this  concept called expectancy hacking and the   idea is when you talk about expectancy which  is kind of how much you expect to profit on   average for every trade right once you  factor in all the winners and losers   and I mentioned people always focus on a win  rate but they don't focus on the Lost size so   if I have now fixed the win loss ratio through  my mechanics the only thing that remains to   determine my expectancy is the win rate right  expectancy is kind of a function of those three   things the win rate the win size and the loss  size now even if I have fixed the win loss ratio   I don't know the future like I can't know exactly  how much my roommate's going to be but I will I   know that if the win rate is high enough right  and expectancy you can kind of multiply it out   like your One Rate times how much you win and  then minus the loss rate times how much you lose   you'll get some average expectancy per trade and  so the win rate's High Enough the expectancy will   be positive and then if it's too low it'll be  negative right period That's it's either above   or below kind of that so-called break-even win  rate and so the only last piece is you kind of   have to find a strategy you can do back testing  or you can just kind of play around with different   uh mostly through back testing at least you get  some context obviously you have to live trade to   see if things play out but if I have a you know  with my strategy well one of them that we do and   getting back to the Delta if we sell a put option  you know at you know 15 Delta or whatever it is   we found that the probability profit of such  a strategy using you know the proper take and   the stop loss you know it's somewhere in the  neighborhood of you know 87 88 and long story   short that basically is high enough to kind of  generate a consistent positive expectancy you   have to let it play out over kind of a number  of trades right any one trade could still win   or lose but the idea is to look at the long-term  Trend right so after all the trades right and you   kind of fix this win to loss ratio at the end of  the day you look at how much you've kind of netted   in terms of profit so let's say every trade I sell  I clicked 100 and if the expectancy at the end of   the day after everything's done including all the  losses is I'm averaging about let's call it 25 25   for every 100 I sell so that's what I call kind  of the premium capture rate because what when   all said and done I've netted or captured 25 of  all the premium I've sold right and I shortened   that to PCR for premium capture rate and it's for  me kind of a measure it's like okay I'm basically   trying to net 25 cents on a dollar if you want to  kind of bring that down to a smaller um easier to   easier number to to talk about so that concept of  the expectancy hacking in the premium capture rate   using those very simple mechanics of shaping your  win loss profile and letting the win rate play   out over long term in a very kind of systematic  probabilistic way that's kind of the approach   um how do you prepare for like big spreads  and slippage and things like that in your   premium capture rate how do you take that into  consideration right so firstly I've only been   applying this to the most lucrative instruments  which is spy or SPX it can be done with yes   options you know many s p Futures options or if  for smaller accounts it can also work on mes which   is the the micro options the Futures options so  that's the first thing on a very liquid instrument   the spread will be tighter right if we try  this approach on some really low volume or   you know Meme stock probably not going  to work the same so that's for one and   the other thing is to focus on longer dated  options I know recently what kind of like the   the the meme stock and the retail and the  Robin Hood no Mania you know there's people   trading very short data like weekly options  and you see all these videos on YouTube about   like weekly paychecks and write seven DT  options the the shorter data the option the   certain um parameters or Greeks about the way they  move and reacting to in reaction to how the market   moves that will basically cause the spreads to be  wider right that's kind of what you're mentioning   so I generally apply these strategies to like 90  days or further right 90 DTE so that's kind of one   other way and those two will mostly keep you kind  of more protected in terms of having very liquid   options that you're Trading but at the end of  the day you're right there are times when you   have to cross the spread right if volatility gets  really high or even if there's a gap right again   I mentioned the caveat is that you have to kind  of hope that you can control that loss amount   and sometimes let's say you close you know the  end of the day and that the option is sitting at   close to your stop loss or 180 or whatever and  the next day the market gaps down right likely   by the time the Market opens the prices already  passed your stop now you should still get out but   in this case like yes you're going to take  a stop that's higher than you anticipated   but from what I've found with enough occurrences  and long term even with those instances where you   have to cross the spread or bad slippage you just  bake that into your expectancy Max right so let's   say what that kind of perfect three to one ratio  some win rate X win rate is going to give you y   expectancy but you'll find through testing when  and live Trading with the slippage your loss is   a little bit higher than x right which just means  your expectancy is a little less than y and you   just basically break that in right so I sometimes  get pushback about this approach of it can't work   because you'll never get out the slippage and  this and that um but my response is just well   just Embrace those things right if we know they  happen figure out a way to mitigate or work   around them and just incorporate them into your  models and that that's kind of my Approach on it   to minimize that the spread and slippage  possibilities from from the very start you   don't really get into individual stocks basically  right that's correct for this approach I don't I'm   focusing okay it's mainly focused on right now  as the SMB index because that is in fact right   the most liquid um yeah okay but if you do I mean  if someone wants to not do that and and go into   like individual stocks for example I I actually  like to pick individual stocks but that are super   liquid as well probably not as liquid as SPX but  but then if you also do that and also diversify   have not just one underlying stock but several  maybe like say five to ten with that make it less   risky as well um so that can help in the sense  that if the individual you know tickers you're   trading aren't completely correlated right you're  going to get some diversification of just the what   the Market's doing but in that case you may not  because I actually they do just use stop orders   and you may not want to do that with individual  symbols or you may want to kind of manage them uh   and the thing is if you trade longer data options  they do move slower so you will have time you know   presumably to actually look at what's going on  in your portfolio I'm like okay this position   is approaching or it's at the level of lost  that I want to take right so you can manually   either do an adjustment or stop out or whatever  it is you may not want to leave it to just a hard   stop order because if those trigger right and I  don't know if you've used those before but you   are at the subject you know to the whims of the  liquidity right and there's any market makers or   counterparties that are willing to fill you at a  reasonable price so yeah I uh I think for me I'm   comfortable using kind of just typical stop orders  and I've and this is one of those things that like   people always kind of are skeptical about but  you know I've done it and on this particular   instrument in this particular situation but if  that's not something you're comfortable with then   yeah the the approach you can still apply but you  may want to kind of take a little bit more of a   Hands-On approach and exit yourself and work the  order as opposed to relying on like a hard stop   or just a mechanical order yeah that's that that's  something that I think maybe most beginner options   Traders weren't taught to you know apply uh actual  hard stop losses versus adjusting your positions   or rolling out early or closing out before  expiration or just leaving it until expiration   so what are the risks of using um stop losses  even on liquid like index the SPX for example   what are the risks of using that so in terms of  the actual implementation I I think the main risk   that people think of is again those weird times  when the bid ass spread is really wide and you   take a huge fill that's way above what you  want to get out at right so that's kind of   like the the really practical consideration so  we talked about how to manage those but I think   the other more conceptual risk in this mindset  of not using stops it kind of boils down to   your approach and the type of strategy you use  and what I what I mean is you know you talk about   picking individual symbols right and having  positions and adjusting as opposed to stopping out   I kind of can the way I view it is uh kind of uh  opportunistic trading versus systematic trading   right opportunistic meaning you know maybe you  have a way to look for positions where you think   you have an edge maybe you you know look at charts  and if you think there's someone on bottom you   know you sell a put which is you know a bullish  thesis or vice versa everything just kind of kind   of is hitting a resistance and you sell a call  right which is kind of a bearish thesis or you   might scan for tickers that have high volatility  right because you think there's more premium and   there's some Edge there but you're essentially  kind of hunting for these different opportunities   and once you get into them you want to you don't  want to lose or you don't want to take a loss so   when things don't go your way you can adjust you  can roll and you're almost kind of managing these   on like an individual level but what I wanted  to get you to think about is so my Approach is   more systematic right I'm actually for example  selling a put option you know 90 DTE 15 Delta   every single day regardless of what the Market's  doing now if I were to say you know hit a stop one   day and on that because the Market's going down  and then because I'm going to enter a new trade   anyways that trade the new trade is probably  going to be at a different strike further out   of the money right because I always entering at  the same Delta right and so I've closed one trade   that I'm losing and I've entered another one  at a different position maybe a different time   what does that sound like does that not sound  like a role you know because it sounds like a   role right a role is closing one position opening  another right right but so the way I kind of   uh reconcile the two is you can talk about stops  right and use that you know it's almost like this   word that shall not be spoken right or what if I  completely change it around I'm not going to use   the word I'm gonna say I enter multiple positions  and diversify across time and I'm constantly   adjusting the Delta and exposure of my book when  the market moves too much and I'm showing a profit   I want to lock in some profits and take risk off  the table and kind of lighten the position size   that I have locking gains and when the market  moves against me and I'm getting you know my   deltas and my my risk is getting too high I want  to manage my exposure by closing some positions   you know opening new ones that have a slightly  less Delta right so I've said all this but I'm   talking about it in the context of managing  risk and managing exposure but but guess what   that is exactly what I do with my profit taking  and stop losses right and so this mindset shift   of I'm using what is called a stop but it's just  a tool to adjust exposure right and I want to kind   of challenge you on one more thing like let's say  you have a habit of you know entering at a certain   DTE and maybe regardless of what it's doing you  want to exit or roll at a certain like let's say   tasty trade talks about entering at 45 days DTE  and then exiting one of the options at 21 GTE   because they want to avoid kind of that late cycle  risk and call it gamma risk or let's say you enter   at a certain Delta let's say 10 Delta right and  you have a habit of rolling out to uh let's say   the option moves against you the Delta goes up  to 20 and you want to roll it back to 10 right   that's a stop right a stop is just there's  something that's triggering you to make an   adjustment and so this thought of and I think what  people kind of push back against is necessarily is   exiting a position and then being done right so  if you enter a trade and you stop out and you   don't do anything out they just take the loss and  move on right I guess people feel like for one you   don't want like to lose and for two you if you  think there's still some opportunity left like   you kind of want to stay in that position you  want to still be engaged with that ticker but   you want to change the exposure right to manage  risk but really that you've stopped out right but   you just re-engage in a different position and so  because my system for this particular strategy is   just entering constantly but using profit takes  and stop losses to adjust the position that's   really just a continuous process of adjusting  right so that that's kind of like the message   I've been kind of trying to spread is it's like  I use the word stop but like I could I could   literally just explain what I do without using the  word stop once but it could be the same thing and   I almost feel like sometimes yeah that would be  taken better right so that kind of mindset shift   and that's like what I wanted to challenge people  to think about differently I also see your uh the   difference too is when you implement stop losses  it's it's more systematic it takes the emotion   does that too of course sure whereas rolling  you're you're still stuck in it should I roll   it now or leave it in there there's a lot of  discretionary decisions you have to make and   when you roll things out that's true I mean  it's funny you say discretionary but I would   I don't want to make assumptions but I  would hope that for one there should be   kind of some absolute loss limit where if it's  too much you just gotta move on right because   you've got to protect your Capital but on the  other hand if you roll yes you want to stay   in a Trader and want to stay engaged with that  position but you probably should also have the   same whatever thesis you had to begin with  that thesis should still be intact right so   if you just don't believe that position is going  to have the edge or it's gonna do play out the   way you think it is you shouldn't rule right you  should just get out so I I want to say that even   when you roll and there's some discretion it's  almost like rather than having one rule or two   rules that I use you have like ten you have like  a a set of rules and you're still trying to stay   within the confines it's not completely without a  plan you know um that that's how I see it anyways   yeah that just emphasizes the importance  of having your trading plan in place right   um do you adjust your strategy for periods of very  high or low implied volatility how does implied   volatility what is it the role that it plays in  in your strategy so with the idea with expectancy   hacking which we talked about the math behind that  there's one other element and this kind of bakes   in the implied volatility that you're asking about  if I were to sell a 15 Delta option at 90dte the   amount of Premium that takes in that's going to  change what the level of implied volatility right   but if I do for example a fix one contract every  day that basically means every trade is going to   collect a slightly different amount of Premium  based on what implied volatility is doing now   if I still apply the same 60 profit take 200 stop  loss those amounts relative to each trade will   stay fixed as a percentage right 60 and 200. but  because the premium is different in absolute terms   the dollar amount will be different so for  example on a trade that I collected two   thousand dollars on sixty percent you know  is going to be twelve hundred dollars right   and if I only collect a thousand dollars  then sixty percent and six hundred dollars   so this could introduce what's called sequence  risk which is just path dependency if through pure   bad luck I only won the small trades and I got  stopped out at the big ones that's basically going   to skew the probabilities right because you're  essentially not sizing consistently right because   I because of the way my strategy is set up the  amount of Premium you collect for me is a proxy   for the amount of risk right because everything  is tied to that percentage relative to the credit   so the adjustment I make is I tailor the size of  the trade to always Target so my phrase is called   credit targeting I'm targeting the same amount of  Premium per entry so what can happen essentially   on high IV I will scale down the size of it  because you're collecting more premium per   contract so I don't need a Salesman contracts  and vice versa when volatility is lower I'll   go up in contract a bit to collect because each  contract collects less premium so by targeting a   fixed level premium this essentially minimizes  that sequence risk because every single trade   is sized consistently but again consistently  in terms of credit not necessarily in terms of   contract size I think that's kind of a a mechanic  that I haven't seen people talk about and that   that's something that is actually key to um my  type of systematic approach uh David what what   exactly do you mean when you say sequence risk  sequence okay so if I were let's just say there is   I make four traits and trade one I collect  100 Trade two I click 200 trade three I   clicked 100 and Trade four I clicked 200  right so small big small big if I happen to   lose all the small ones right the 100 ones and  sorry um lose the big ones the 200 trades and I   win the small ones you're not gonna get the same  expectancy as if let's say somebody else did the   same strategy but like their their sequence of  Trades was different they're offset right and   their winners and losers will reverse right they  won the big ones and they lost the small ones   even if each in this case even if we trade the  same approach because one person won the big ones   whereas I won the small ones our p l is going to  be different so the expectancy is dependent on   the sequence of events or the sequence of Trades  that's sequence risk but by leveling the amount   of premium for every trade I'm basically trying to  eliminate that sequence Risk by making each trade   sized consistently yeah uh okay equalizing it you  don't want to be uh I guess if you want to just   call it bad luck you don't want to be subject to  bad luck that's I guess the the Layman I see yeah   so you mentioned that you have you take a top-down  approach um can you describe what that is exactly   in I think it's related to what you just mentioned  about yeah if we put all this together and so   let's just say high level like I've tested this  one strategy and I think the long-term expectancy   or PCR premium capture rate so let's just call it  25 for kind of a use Simple numbers so if I had a   if I wanted to make 10 so if they had a hundred  thousand dollars and I'm trying to make 10 10   is 10 000 and that's the Prof the piano I want  to make in a given year so if I'm expecting to   long-term net 25 of all the premium myself I take  my 10 000 p l Target and basically divided by   0.25 so you get 40 000 which means if I sell  forty thousand a premium in a given year then if   I net 25 of that right that's my 10 000 Target  and so basically I have to sell forty thousand   dollars a premium and now if I'm trading every  day there's 252 trades you know I take the 40   000 and I divided by 252. and that gives you the  daily so-called credit Target and essentially the  

plan is if you sell that amount of Premium every  day and let the strategy play out right at the   end of the year you would have sold 40 000 in  premium and if at the end of the year you've   captured 25 you would have captured the you know  ten thousand dollars and so you can kind of set a   high level return Target and use that to back  into the size of each individual trade and again   size in this case is determined by the amount  of Premium not necessarily the contract size   so does this only work on can this work this  top-down approach can it work on choosing   individual stocks there's two ways you can look  at it if your approach is kind of systematic to   a degree that it can be back tested and there's  actually quite a few off-the-shelf Services people   can use to to back test different strategies and  you think there's some kind of consistency there   in terms of the uh the capture rate then  yes you can kind of use that to size   um the trades but if you take what's you call  kind of a systematic sorry more of a discretionary   approach than you might need some history of uh  live trades right and then log them and sort of   see hey you know you know I use a certain amount  of capital per trade and I usually um able to you   know make X dollars and for every dollar risk  and once you have some kind of expectation it's   all about expectations right and again it's not  a prediction right even with a system like mine   where the the PCR I think it's 25 that's going  to vary year to year right long term and maybe 25   maybe right but one year it could be 40. one year  could be lower one year could be zero like this   year is probably gonna be zero for for the one  I'm running which is fine because again the market   went down like 25 as of you know the Friday right  um but it's more about if you've traded enough to   kind of have some expectation of what you  get out of you know the capital that you   that you put at risk then you can use it as  a guideline for kind of sizing up and down   um I think that would be how I would approach it  to kind of use the same same philosophy I guess   going back a little bit to the the volatility you  mentioned something I thought was very interesting   in another podcast you were on that you use high  volatility not to make more but to make the same   with less risk I don't know if you can uh expand  on that a little bit give a little context to that   because I really thought that's interesting so  that was basically baked into what I mentioned   about the fact that because I'm credit targeting  and you're gonna cut more premium when IV is high   I naturally size down when volatility is high  which also kind of answers your question or   from earlier about do I do anything  different from a strategic standpoint   there is no change to the mechanic but  because of the nature of options pricing   it naturally scales up and down in such a way  that during High volatility so if I'm targeting   some X return which means my credit Target is you  know some number then what's super high IV I can   collect the same amount of Premium as my target  using less contracts smaller size and actual you   know notional or contract size terms and kind  of that's what I mean I don't have this approach   because some you know when people first get into  options selling sometimes they're taught that like   high volatility is opportunity right you you stay  small when Ivy's low and then you throw a bunch   of buying power when IVs have like that's when you  make the most money that's not untrue necessarily   but when IV is high it's high for a reason right  it's probably just some event the Market's coming   volatile so you still have to be very cognizant  of risk and manage the trades right if you want to   kind of load up so to speak on high IV and that's  just that's just one approach but in my case   I just basically kind of take the opposite where  like I'm actually scaling down not because I'm   like trying to be more conservative but just  because my mechanics dictate that since I'm   trying to Target the same level premium I just  don't need to use as much leverage or capital or   um contract size when the IV is high that's  all when the vix is high or when the when   there's a lot of option premium wouldn't  we want to take advantage of those times   so in a manner of speaking yes um but I kind of  alluded to the fact that when vix is high it's   when the it's high for a reason right and it's  because the market believes that there's going   to be a lot of volatility and the underlying  or the S P or whatever is going to move a lot   and when it moves a lot right you can be at risk  especially if you're selling options and so the   supposed Edge is that because volatility is you  know they call it mean reverting right when it's   when there's a lot of fear in the market right  usually high levels of fear are not sustainable   and so volatility levels will come down and so  there's a supposed Edge is when you sell High   volatility you know there's an The Edge comes in  because it's not sustainable volatility should   have actually come down when volatility comes  down the prices of options comes down which means   remember when you sell hot you're selling high  buying low that that's a kind of the backwards   thinking that people who first get into options  don't have to get around because we normally think   of yeah Buy Low cell habits and sell High Buy Low  um so yes they're supposedly presumably There's an   opportunity that presents itself when volatility  is high but you just have to caveat what that   doesn't mean number when you don't go all out and  just blow all your buying power and so everything   right and on the other hand you still have to have  a plan right even if there is some more Edge when   volatility is high you always have to have a plan  and you have to to be able to know how much risk   you're actually taking and be able to manage it  accordingly your strategy is very data driven   right do you do a lot of back testing that's right  we do and um and as I mentioned there's a lot of   uh um I don't know if you heard of optional Mega  and there's like e Delta Pro and those are those   have different tickers you can test there's uh  optional Mega even has like five minute data   which you don't really need that for longer data  strategy but I know there's a lot of people who   like like to test um like intraday strategies but  these kind of software available now for retail   like you can do a lot of different enumerations  and they're fast right so you're not waiting ages   to do a back test and so this kind of like uh  automated back test lends itself very well to   testing systematic strategies right you can throw  out a bunch of enumerations and different things   and and just really like kind of focus on on  you know different different patterns and stuff   yeah so I now want to kind of get into um from  your perspective some of the misconceptions   about options trading this is for the benefit of  especially for those um who are currently trading   stocks and are interested in in trading options  or have started you know learning about options   trading but maybe stuck on moving forward and  what's your take on kind of addressing some of   this misconception first about is it riskier  and is it hard to learn and then where do you   start yeah I think uh one of the misconceptions  is that option trading has to be super leveraged   and I think that comes from more of the fact  that if you have access to the leverage because   the options themselves are by definition leveraged  instruments and the way the the margin is used for   example if I wanted to buy a thousand dollars  worth of stock right you have to put out a   thousand dollars of capital right to buy those  shares but if I wanted to have an instrument or   an option that can give you the same exposure  as that thousand dollars of stock your broker   may only require you to put up one-fifth or even  one-tenth of that as margin and you're not even   outlaying any cash right it's just like the margin  account will be deducted and you'll see the buying   power go down and so first of all if people don't  understand that they're leveraged then they can   unknowingly leverage a lot higher than they've  realized right so in this case if the option   is a ten to one leverage instrument and I use  50 of my Capital thinking oh I'm using half my   Capital well you're actually levered you know five  times more than you think right because it's like   um sorry if it's ten to one margin then you're  leveraged like 500 right you're using 50 Capital   but your notional exposure is like 500 so I think  it's more about a not misunderstanding of how the   option works in terms of what the broker requires  of the capital you put up and so you can use them   super leveraged but you don't have to right and  another misconception is like uh for so people   like I guess in again like the 2020 2021 like the  Robin Hood and the meme stuff phenomena and YOLO   call buying where you're only using options to get  super crazy gains right 500 thousand percent and   yes options are non-linear meaning you can spend a  little bit of cash and buy these out of the money   option that have a low probability of success  but when they have to hit huge but that's not   the only way in fact that's like we don't  use options that way options are literally   you know tools and I think that's one of the  reasons like people can get lost is because first   of all even the same symbol right there's options  at different expirations different maturities   there's different strikes and so the way to behave  and then there's Greeks which you know describe   how option price moves in relationship to the  direction of the underlying with relation to the   level of implied volatility with and with respect  to you know time right um and so um again for us I   think it's just the understanding that you can use  options to express different hypothesis that you   have on what the market will do which direction  to go when it's going to happen and I think that's   that that's kind of the beauty of it but also the  complexity like there's just a lot you can do and   I think really you have to kind of figure out like  what your goal is and you can craft the strategy   um and then lastly it's like options are like  for degenerates for gambling like obviously you   can again like you can buy these lotto tickets but  like really I think they can and they don't have   to be seen as a super exotic thing and they can  really be used in conjunction with kind of more   modest and Conservative Strategies and just kind  of more as an enhancement or a way to express   different opinions right and you know a lot of  the the strategies we talked about and not just   here but in general people talk more about on  the South Side you know selling options versus   buying options I feel like there's not enough  talk about you know when to buy a long put or   something simple like that as a starting point  when to buy a long put or buy a long call what   do you think about that as kind of starting  out like just to learn the basics if you know   coming from maybe like a stock trading background  like you know when there's trading stocks you're   generally kind of trading directionally right  and the direction you pick may be based on some   technical analysis fundamental analysis whatever  it is that gives you a thesis now if you have   a direction that you want to bet on right  options are a tool to again give you Leverage   in a way that's capital efficient and limits your  loss right if I pay you know 50 bucks on this out   of the money call option on this stock that's the  extent of what I can lose right but there's that   possibility to make a big gain and so that's kind  of the appeal so if you have an assumption right   you can buy puts and calls as a way to express  that directional opinion now on kind of the more   sophisticated side you know people might look  at um kind of historical levels of volatility   uh versus kind of what's going on in the market  and if they have an opinion that like right now   volatility is very high or the implied levels of  volatility right it's like the option pricing but   they don't believe the the Market's gonna actually  be that volatile right so they believe the implied   volatility is higher than what's going to be  realized what's that's going to happen What I'm   trying to get is they believe the options are so  called expensive right this is kind of when you   want to sell them and on a vice versa if for some  reason they think there's going to be some kind   of vendors coming volatility but the market is  kind of the implied level is very low and kind   of believe that it's under pricing the risk that's  out there and they believe it's cheap relative to   what's going to happen right this is when you kind  of go around and buy options so it's the same idea   of trying to buy low sell high but that's in  relationship to what your analysis tells you   about the level of volatility is like when you  think options are price cheap you can buy them   right and vice versa um so that's just another  another angle yeah so far the strategy that you   described with expectancy hacking with adjusting  your win size loss size risk reward ratio that's   that's a form of risk management yes and it sounds  like you have a very good tight risk management in   place you know some people they it's drilled into  them too is you know you have to you've got to   have risk management you know you got to have that  layer in there and that's Jordan my ingrained in   me too to have risk management but at some point  though you can have so much risk management that   you can almost have no Edge and what comes  first what's more important risk management   and then Edge or Edge and then risk management  or both if you want to trade and sell options   firstly you have a fundamental belief that  there is some Edge in the mispricing or   general overstatement of options right because  if you believe that even the Market's efficient   it's hard to well you can't perfectly price  the future right the unknown which is why   there's that supposed overstatement  of volatility overpricing of options   and all the mechanics are right because even  if we blew that edge is there you can't just   sell options willy-nilly because occasionally the  risk is greater than the market thinks right and   you blow up right and that's why you have risk  risk management and mechanics but something to   consider is that regardless of the how much Edge  there is and this is something that's true for all   trading and this is just general kind of bankroll  management you you know that concept that people   talk about of like if you lose one percent then  you only have to make about a percent to catch   up right if you lose about 10 you've got to make  like 12 or something to catch up and the extreme   examples if you lose 50 50 you have to make 100  to get back to zero right you've probably heard   that there's like these charts and stuff and  and that's the idea of the volatility tax and   it just means when you talk about compounding  your account right it's asymmetric right it's   it's almost faster a compound downward than it is  to compound upwards so my point is regardless of   how much Edge you think you have or there is in a  strategy if it's not size right that nature of the   kind of the asymmetric compounding will basically  destroy whatever Edge there is because you won't   if we're too volatile you'll just kind of end up  going nowhere if if any one trade or any one you   know loss kind of wipes out a huge amount of the  bankroll so like the bankroll management that in   and of itself needs to be almost considered as a  mechanic right and that's why um Focus so much on   the credit targeting and using that as a proxy of  risk right because I for me I'm like if I collect   this much credit because I've told myself I'm  going to get out at this level one way I look   at is I look at all of my positions that I have  open on the books and if I have X amount of credit   of for open positions I'll know that if they all  get stopped out right at the level that I intend   right that's the caveat then my realized losses  you know twice that for example and so I have kind   of a a general idea of like my entire book size if  that's lost what that represents as a percentage   of

2022-11-25 09:48

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