SteadyOptions is an options trading forum where you can find solutions from top options traders. Join Us!

We’ve all been there… researching options strategies and unable to find the answers we’re looking for. SteadyOptions has your solution.

tjlocke99

Managing a Triple Calendar

Recommended Posts

Kim and SO Friends,

I posted this under the RUT calendar post as well, but I know not everyone will see it there.

I am interested in a general practice for managing a triple calendar however I am providing my specific example below. Thanks!

I am currently in a RUT triple calendar 820 Put, 840 Call, and 860 Call:

long Jan 03 '13

short Dec 27 '12

I have a very small position.

I entered the trade last Thurs with RUT at 828.

Current the trade is slightly profitable with the 820 put down 22% though. However I have no idea how to close this. Should I close the whole trade or leg out and if so which should I leg out of first? I am thinking of closing the 840 which is up over 30% and than closing at the next available move towards 820 or 860.

Thank you!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I would actually do the opposite - close the 820. You goal is to keep the underlying under the tent as much as possible. So if you had 820/840 for example and the stock moved from 828 to 845, what would you do? Move the tent, by closing the 820 and opening the 860. Your current P/L is irrelevant - the only question is what is the position you want to own NOW? 820 provides some downside protection but very little theta which is the main goal of those trades.

  • Upvote 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

well IB (not sure about other brokers) only lets you trade combos with 4 legs. However I think even if you could enter 6 legs I would try to close them one by one (each calendar). As usually you should get better fills. Spreads, if they cant be filled by lifting/hitting all offers/bid on the individual legs will go to a spread order book and then you have to find a MM who wants to trade your 4 legged combo - the odds (or rather spreads) are better you'll find someone willing to take the other side if you have only 2 legs.

I'd stick in all of them at mid and when the market moves one will be filled and then you get more agressive on the other offers or if you don't mind the directional risk (I would) then you can wait around a little longer and wait for the market to reverse to fill the other calendar(s). If you have a big position you might want to close 1/2 or 1/3 to minimise the risk the market moves sharply after you get you first fill.

It also depends how directional your position overall is nad whether you have a view on that. Say you are overall long delta and worried about a pull back then you might want to close the calendar with the highest long delta first.

hope that helps.

m.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I would actually do the opposite - close the 820. You goal is to keep the underlying under the tent as much as possible. So if you had 820/840 for example and the stock moved from 828 to 845, what would you do? Move the tent, by closing the 820 and opening the 860. Your current P/L is irrelevant - the only question is what is the position you want to own NOW? 820 provides some downside protection but very little theta which is the main goal of those trades.

Thanks Kim and Marco!

I was also considering just holding all three spreads in the triple calendar another day, however with RUT back up I am too close to the 860 again. Kim if I close the 820 then I take that loss and if there is a pull back then I have less protection. That is why I was thinking of closing the 840 and then closing the other spreads when RUT moved closer to 820 or 860. I wasn't sure if there was a best practice on this though.

Right now if I close all 3 I am sitting at around break even after commissions.

Kim or Marco would you still recommend closing the 820? Right now that is looking at 25 to 30% loss but the unrealized gains on the 840 calls are evaporating now as well.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

well IB (not sure about other brokers) only lets you trade combos with 4 legs. However I think even if you could enter 6 legs I would try to close them one by one (each calendar). As usually you should get better fills. Spreads, if they cant be filled by lifting/hitting all offers/bid on the individual legs will go to a spread order book and then you have to find a MM who wants to trade your 4 legged combo - the odds (or rather spreads) are better you'll find someone willing to take the other side if you have only 2 legs.

I'd stick in all of them at mid and when the market moves one will be filled and then you get more agressive on the other offers or if you don't mind the directional risk (I would) then you can wait around a little longer and wait for the market to reverse to fill the other calendar(s). If you have a big position you might want to close 1/2 or 1/3 to minimise the risk the market moves sharply after you get you first fill.

It also depends how directional your position overall is nad whether you have a view on that. Say you are overall long delta and worried about a pull back then you might want to close the calendar with the highest long delta first.

hope that helps.

m.

Thanks Marco. When you say highest long delta do you mean the highest long absolute value delta? I currently don't have other positions other than long stock positions and an aapl bull call spread.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Thanks Kim and Marco!

I was also considering just holding all three spreads in the triple calendar another day, however with RUT back up I am too close to the 860 again. Kim if I close the 820 then I take that loss and if there is a pull back then I have less protection. That is why I was thinking of closing the 840 and then closing the other spreads when RUT moved closer to 820 or 860. I wasn't sure if there was a best practice on this though.

Right now if I close all 3 I am sitting at around break even after commissions.

Kim or Marco would you still recommend closing the 820? Right now that is looking at 25 to 30% loss but the unrealized gains on the 840 calls are evaporating now as well.

Whenever you take a loss or not is irrelevant. What is relevant is what position you want to own now. Would you open it as a new position? If you want some downside protection, then keep the 820. But 840 and 860 provide you the best theta, and this is the most important thing with those trades.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Thanks Marco. When you say highest long delta do you mean the highest long absolute value delta? I currently don't have other positions other than long stock positions and an aapl bull call spread.

Kim's advice was more specific on that trade mine more general. If you use IB you can use risk manager (other brokers may have similar tools where you can see the greeks of your position) drill down into the legs of the trade to see the delta of each leg. There you see which legs give you long or short delta exposure and adjust you position if needed. (for example closing the 820 Calendar as kim suggested will remove short delta exposure so you'll get longer delta)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account. It's easy and free!


Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Sign In Now

  • Similar Content

    • By idk0098
      hi rookie here sorry for so basic questions i just cant figure them out by my self
       
      why should we use calendar spread when we can do diagonal spreads if i want to say more specific
      in calendar spread you have less profit when the stocks move up or down compare to the diagonal that you have more profit 
      i hope you understand my question i feel i typed it soo bad😂
      thank you in advanced
       
    • By Kim
      On January 27, one of our long term members posted the following post:


       
      We booked nice gains ranging from 18% to 37% on CF pre-earnings calendars in the previous cycles, but this one was different. We usually don't bet on the earnings date (we did it once and got burned). But the risk/reward of the trade looked very favorable: if the earnings date will be on the second week of February, the spread should keep its value and probably produce 15-20% gain. But based on previous cycles, it was very likely that the earnings will be on the third week of February.
       
      Based on this information, some members started building positions around 0.75-0.85:

       
      I started scaling into the spreads last Thursday around $1.00-1.05 and officially, we had a full position by Friday close at cost base of 1.025 per spread.
       
      Sure enough, after the Friday close CF announced that they will be reporting earnings on February 18, the third week of February. On Monday, the week2 options IV decreased as expected since those options now expire before earnings, and the monthly options IV increased. We sold the spreads between $1.55-1.75, booking 62% gain in two days of holding, without taking any directional risk.



      Some members did even better:
       

       
      Again, what is especially remarkable about this trade idea is the fact that it came from one of our members, who took the time and the effort to follow and learn our strategies. In SO community, the learning never stops. I am extremely proud of our community that allows us to share ideas and find new opportunities every day.
    • By Dave W
      @Yowster or others,
      I'm hoping to get some advice. I occasionally trade unofficial hold through earnings (HTE) calendars and have run into a recurring issue. After earnings, sometimes the price jump in the stock results in my calendar becoming deep in the money. When I try to close out the deep ITM calendar, the market makes it very difficult or impossible for me to close out at a reasonable price.
       
      For example, this recently happened to me on RHT. I had an 82C calendar spread March 31 short / April 7 long and at the close before earnings on March 27 the stock price was $82.32. About an hour after the open on March 28, RHT stock was at $86.93. So my 82C were $4.93 ITM. But the mid-price to close out the spread was in a kind-of 'backwardation' (yes, I know that isn't the exact right term, but the situation seems similar). The mid for the short leg was $5.00 and the mid for the long leg was $4.90, so a debit of $0.10 to close the spread. Paying a $0.10 debit to close the spread (or even closing at $0.00) seemed unreasonable given that if I held the short leg through expiration, any premium to close the short options would be gone and hopefully the long option would recover some premium ($0.10 to $0.15 based on my review of other RHT options in different time periods).  So I held the spread through expiration and got assigned. I closed out the position the following day using a combo stock / option order on TOS.
       
      I'd like someone who has done a number of these HTE trades to help me understand:
       
      1. Has this ever happened to you? How would you recommend closing the trade when the price to close out the calendar spread is "way off" from what seems reasonable (e.g., having to pay a debit to close)?
       
      2. If I do hold through expiration and get assigned, am I still 100% covered by the long option? In other words, will the changes in the long option prices offset changes in the short stock position exactly? I'm guessing the answer is no, but I haven't really looked at this yet and am not sure the best way to model it.
       
      I appreciate the advice. Thank you!
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.