4 Straddle Strategies for Learning purpose


Straddle Strategies in Option Trading



The straddle strategy is an option strategy that's based on buying both a call and put of a stock. Note that there are various forms of straddles, but we will only be covering the basic straddle strategy. To initiate a Straddle, we would buy a Call and Put of a stock with the same expiration date and strike price. For example, we would initiate a Straddle for company ABC by buying a June 200 Call as well as a June 200 Put. 


Now why would we want to buy both a Call and a Put? Calls are for when you expect the stock to go up, and Puts are for when you expect the stock to go down, right?



In an ideal world, we would like to be able to clearly predict the direction of a stock. However, in the real world, it's quite difficult. On the other hand, it's relatively easier to predict whether a stock is going to move (without knowing whether the move is up or down).



For example, you know that ABC's annual report is coming out this week, but do not know whether they will exceed expectations or not. You could assume that the stock price will be quite volatile, but since you don't know the news in the annual report, you wouldn't have a clue which direction the stock will move. In cases like this, a Straddle strategy would be good to adopt. 



If the price of the stock shoots up, your Call will be way In-The-Money, and your Put will be worthless. If the price plummets, your Put will be way In-The-Money, and your Call will be worthless. This is safer than buying either just a Call or just a Put. If you just bought a one-sided option, and the price goes the wrong way, you're looking at possibly losing your entire premium investment. In the case of Straddles, you will be safe either way, though you are spending more initially since you have to pay the premiums of both the Call and the Put.



Quote:
Let's look at a numerical example: All numbers in Rupees

For stock XYZ, let's imagine the share price is now sitting at 63. There is news that a legal suit against XYZ will conclude tomorrow. No matter the result of the suit, you know that there will be volatility. If they win, the price will jump. If they lose, the price will plummet.

So we decide to initiate a Straddle strategy on the XYZ stock. We decide to buy a 65 Call and a 65 Put on XYZ, 65 being the closest strike price to the current stock price of 63. The premium for the Call (which is 2 Out-Of-The-Money) is 0.75, and the premium for the Put (which is 2 In-The-Money) is 3.00. So our total initial investment is the sum of both premiums, which is 3.75.

Fast forward 2 days. XYZ won the legal battle! Investors are more confident of the stock and the price jumps to 72. The 65 Call is now 7 In-The-Money and its premium is now 8.00. The 65 Put is now Way-Out-Of-The-Money and its premium is now 0.25. If we close out both positions and sell both options, we would cash in 8.00 + 0.25 = 8.25. That's a profit of 4.50 on our initial 3.75 investment!

Of course, we could have just bought a basic Call option and earned a greater profit. But we didn't know which direction the stock price would go. If XYZ lost the legal battle, the price could have dropped 10, making our Call worthless and causing us to lose our entire investment. A Straddle strategy is more conservative and will profit whether the stock goes up or down.

If Straddles are so good, why doesn't everybody use them for every investment? 



It fails when the stock price doesn't move. If the price of the stock hovers around the initial price, both the Call and the Put will not be that much In-The-Money. Furthermore, the closer it is to the expiration date, the cheaper premiums are. Option premiums have a Time Value associated with them. So an option expiring this month will have a cheaper premium than an option with the same strike price expiring next year. 



So in the case where the stock price doesn't move, the premiums of both the Call and Put will slowly decay, and we could end up losing a large percentage of our investment. The bottom line is: for a Straddle strategy to be profitable, there has to be volatility, and a marked movement in the stock price. 

4 comments:

  1. Very good post,you publishing good and meaningfull information . i really appreciate for you posting thanks for sharing this post

    ReplyDelete
  2. hi i like your post.you share good and meaningfull information in this post. really thanks

    ReplyDelete
  3. Does it mean Like Hedge in term used in commodity.since in Hedge we also do same having a position of both the sell and buy side and once we are aware of a trend move in some direction we get out of the other side position.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for giving your valuable inputs, TRENDGURUS

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