TheTradingReport

Masterful

Well, you don’t need me to tell you volatility is extremely low right now, at least relative to the last 16 month’s or so. But is it time for the Dispersion Trade? By that I refer to the trade where you buy options gamma in individual names vs. shorting it in index names. You win if your individual names more around enough and with relatively low correlation such that the index does not move quite as much. Of course few outside a trading desk has either the time or capital to put on too many names in this fashion, so it’s more a concept than anything else. And the concept is more or less net owning options in individual stocks and net selling them in indices.

Take this Mastercard here. Up top we have 30 Day Implied volatility (in yellow) over the past 6 month’s. Sometimes names making new highs like MA lately will see volatility start to perk up a bit. Not Mastercard, it’s getting cheaper and cheaper. And tough to argue as you can see the realized volatility in the stock itself is falling off a cliff as evidenced by 30 day HV on the upper graph and 10 day HV in the lower one.

Nothing here says you want to net own options in a vacuum.

I’m not a big proponent of bottom fishing options volatility, and this MA chart shows exactly why, Even if right here, right now becomes THE low in in options volatility, you may still lose money if you become a net buyer. You won’t be able to make up your daily decay in MA options until realized volatility catches up with implied volatility, and it’s tough to time if/when that happens.

But what if we compare MA to SPY? I have these same 2 charts for SPY at the bottom of the post, and as you can see, it’s pretty identical. Implied volatility at lows, but still considerably higher than realized volatility.

So what does this say for “dispersion”?

Well, my anecdotal experience says that you tend to win if volatility picks up, even though ostensibly is a volatility neutral play. Remember, you’re selling options in one spot and net buying presumably similar dollar amounts in a host of others. For whatever reason, the pickup in volatility translates better to individual names.

Again though, it’s impractical and too capital intensive to trade many names this way. So let’s summarize it as such. Virtually every option in America is cheap relative to recent options pricing, but expensive relative to realized volatility. If you have a notion to buy options, I’d stick to individual names. If you prefer shorting, do in an index or index-based ETF.

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Daily Options Report

Adam Warner is the author of Options Volatility Trading: Strategies for Profiting from Market Swings due for release in October 2009 from McGraw Hill. He co-wrote the options column on Street Insight from spring 2003 to spring 2005, and is currently Options Editor at Minyanville.com.

When not writing, Adam is a proprietary option trader with Addormar Co, Inc. He traded as a member of the American Stock Exchange from 1988-2001, and in several off-floor locations since then.

Adam Warner graduated Johns Hopkins University with a degree in Economics.

Options Volatility Trading: Strategies for Profiting from Market Swings

"Options Volatility Trading educates novice to intermediate investors on the nuances of the volatility index (VIX), the psychology behind it, and the best strategies to employ during dramatic market shifts. It provides a solid grounding in historical volatility patterns, distortions created by market noise, and how to use tools other than VIX."

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