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Options Trading: The Right Time for Buy-Write

Posted On September 21, 2018 11:43 am
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Here are some other issues to keep in mind when creating or investing in a buy-write (or even put selling strategy.

  • These Are Both Labor- and Commission-Intensive Strategies. The two benchmarks are frictionless in that they do not account for any fees that will be accumulating by rolling positions 12 times a year. Expect a minimum of 1% annual drag on your performance.
  • Volatility Levels Are an Essential Part of the Relative Returns. You can see from the table above that the best relative returns have come over the longer-term time horizons. This can be attributed to the “reversion to the mean” element of volatility levels. Obviously the best time to establish premium selling strategies would be when implied volatility is high; but that of course is a relative term. I think 2011 might offer a nice balance of somewhat elevated implied volatility with a market trending moderately higher.
  • Margining and Dividends. Depending on your account type, a covered call can be margined differently than a short put. Even though the PUT is based on a fully “cashed covered” positioned, the different margining would result in different return on investment (RIO). Also, it’s important to be aware that a covered call, in which one owns the underlying security — this is true even of an  ETF like the Spyder Trust SPY — will collect a dividend. While the expectations of a dividend are supposed to be embedded in the option’s price, in practical terms the assurance of the steady income will often add a few basis points of return.

The Buy-Write Benchmark

But if you didn’t want to try to build your own buy-write of covered call portfolio there are ‘off the shelf’ products.  Most of these funds and ETFs ate based on the CBOE Buy-Write Index.

The BXM tracks a buy-write on the S&P 500 that uses a mechanical approach of selling 30-day at-the-money calls each month. You can read about the methodology of the BXM here on the CBOE website.

Studies have shown that the BXM has outperformed the S&P 500 Index over the past decade with about 35% less volatility. This is how it’s performed over the past six months.

You can see that even as the S&P 500 has gone nowhere the BXM has enjoyed a clear uptrend.

In this current environment it makes a lot of sense to consider the buy write approach.  At the end of this article I’ll suggest a few of the best buy-write ETFs and mutual funds but first I want to dive into exactly how such a portfolio can be built, managed and discuss the pros and cons.

Other Buy-Write Benchmarks have also outperformed the major indices to which they are tied.

Challenges of Replication

But to create a covered position, one would need to trade the futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). This distinction between the cash index and futures and options on futures holds for the NASDAQ 100, and CBOE Dow Jones Index, or DJX.

The distinction between the cash index, its options, and the futures, does present minor obstacles in the form of slightly different contract specifications, and requires a commodity account to trade the futures. While some brokers might offer portfolio margining, others might not be considered a covered position, and therefore may have a higher capital requirement (which greatly reduces your return on investment).

One thing you don’t have to worry about is divergence in performance. Because index options are cash-settled and the futures must converge with the cash price at expiration, there’s no danger of misalignment of prices. Still, this isn’t as clean as trading options that are fungible to an actively traded underlying security. There can be periods where the futures trade at a large premium or discount to the cash market, causing a temporary mismatch in pricing. Note: There also are options on futures contracts, which can make for a more seamless trade because they truly are covered positions.

A much simpler solution would be to use the popular exchange-traded funds, such as the Spyder Trust. Almost all ETFs have options based on the underlying security, and are settled with a delivery of the shares. This means a straightforward covered call (go long 100 shares and sell 1 call contract) can be established in broad market ETFs – such as the NASDAQ 100 Trust (QQQQ) and the Dow Diamonds Trust (DIA) as well as in sector-specific issues, such as Semiconductor HOLDRs (SMH).

Easy ETFs

PowerShares S&P 500 BuyWrite Portfolio ETF  (PBP)

This fund tracks the CBOE S&P 500 BuyWrite Index, The ETF has a a low 0.55% annual fee and also offers very nice yield of 4.14% that is generated through premium received by writing the call option.

Horizons S&P 500 Covered Call ETF (HSPX)

This ETF seeks to match the performance of the S&P 500 Stock Covered Call Index, which  holds a long position in the stocks of the S&P 500 Index while at the same time, short (write) call options on option-eligible stocks in the S&P 500 Index.This fund charges 65 bps in fees per year from investors. Volume is light as it exchanges less than 14,000 shares in hand on average daily basis. The ETF has 2.66% in annual dividends.

Premium selling strategies are a great way to get the wind of time decay at your back. But it’s important to understand your risk and reward and most importantly your expectations. Don’t expect these to provide alpha, rather they are ways to benchmark your portfolio and smooth out returns over time.  The BXM or covered calls tend to underperform during strong bull markets as upside potential is reduced.

Related: 3 Stocks the Best Investors Are Buying Right Now

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About author

Steve Smith

Steve Smith have been involved in all facets of the investment industry in a variety of roles ranging from speculator, educator, manager and advisor. This has taken him from the trading floors of Chicago to hedge funds on Wall Street to the world online. From 1987 to 1996, he served as a market maker at the Chicago Board of Options Exchange (CBOE) and Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). From 1997 to 2007, he was a Senior Columnist and Managing Editor for TheStreet.com, handling their Option Alert and Short Report newsletters. The Option Alert was awarded the MIN “best business newsletter” in 2006. From 2009 to 2013, Smith was a Senior Columnist and Managing Editor for Minyanville’s OptionSmith newsletter, as well as a Risk Manager Consultant for New Vernon Capital LLC. Smith acted as an advisor to build models and option strategies to reduce portfolio exposure and enhance returns for the four main funds. Since 2015, he has worked for Adam Mesh Trading Group. There, he has managed Options360 and Earning 360, been co-leader of Option Academy, and contributed to The Option Specialist website.

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