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How Anchor Survived the 2020 Crash


We are often asked how the Anchor strategy performed during the market crash of 2020. The monthly performance can be seen on the performance page, but it shows the End of Month values and doesn't tell the whole picture. This article will shows a detailed analysis of the Anchor portfolio during the crash.

This is how the Anchor portfolio looked like on Feb.6 2020, two weeks before the start of the decline:

image.png

SPY was at 334, total portfolio value around $143k. This is how the P/L chart looked like:

 

image.png

With 8 SPY contracts, this translates to x1.85 leverage. This setup obviously should perform very well on the upside (the portfolio should easily outperform SPY on any upside move), but the downside doesn't look that great on this P/L chart.

Lets see how things developed.
 

Feb.28 2020, SPY at 290 (down 13%), Anchor down $15k (~10%):

image.png

With SPY down 13%, the Anchor portfolio was down only 10%. This is normal and expected. The strategy is not designed to provide a total protection, especially in smaller declines. 

It is worth mentioning that the puts are typically 5% OTM when opened. It’s entirely possible for Anchor to be up 7%, then the market drops, and we end up down 12% peak to trough (or even a bit more). The Downside of Anchor discusses it in more details.


Two weeks later, March 12, SPY at 251 (down 25%), Anchor down only $4k (~3%):

image.png

Now you can see how the protection kicks in after a bigger decline.

 
Fast forward to March 19 2020, SPY at 234 (down 30%), Anchor UP $5k (~3%):

 

image.png

Now, this is pretty amazing. How this was possible?

Few factors contributed to this major outperformance:

  1. We used deep ITM calls instead of the stock. As the underlying declines, the delta of the calls decreases and they lose less value. In this case SPY declined $100, while the calls declined only $68.
     
  2. We have more long puts than short puts, so the gains of the long puts far outpace the losses of the short puts.
     
  3. During market crashes, IV jumps to the roof (in this case, VIX jumped from 16 to 80+). This caused the long puts to increase in value much more than expected. In addition, we got much more premium from the short puts when rolling.

The bottom line: in the last 30 months, the strategy produced 36.6% CAGR, significantly outperforming the S&P 500, but at the same time provided a full protection during the market crash. To me, this is as close as it gets to the holly grail of investing.
 

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Edited by Kim

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What's your take on using similar strategy on high risk stocks (e.g. Tesla)? risk can be limited and reward would not be compromised. It would be great to see how it behaves on individual stocks. 

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We had a very detailed discussion on this on the Anchor forums.

The short answer is that it won't work because the hedge would be too expensive. 

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