Trading Where You Think Prices Won't Go

 
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by John Jagerson

The market channels frequently. This is tough on active traders as channels can be very difficult to trade. Sometimes these channels coincide with very important and widely anticipated news events. The passage of the stimulus and the bank bailouts are great examples of this kind of situation. Traders are faced with a tight market that may or may not break out of its channel. In these situations it might be easier to trade where the market won't go rather than where you think it will go.Selling Options
  
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Option sellers essentially trade this way all the time. Selling options is a great way to take a non-directional trade and turn the disadvantages of buying options into advantages. In the video today, I will cover some of the basic ideas behind selling an option in the forex and how that can work to your advantage as a trader in a channeling market. To find out more about trading forex options click here.

Selling or writing an option means that you are opening an option trade by selling the option short. When you enter this trade, you are paid the option cost or premium up front. There are a few significant factors to consider as you evaluate and enter this trade. We will walk through each of these issues in a case study.

Why do forex traders care if equities are in a bull market? Find out more here.


Selling the option
Selling out of the money options is a great way to start using this strategy. Although it is perfectly acceptable to sell in the money options, new options traders will usually start the other way around because it seems a little more conservative. Selling an option means that there are two market conditions that will result in a profit. First, the market could stay flat, which will result in you keeping the premium of the option you sold. Second, the market may trend the direction of your forecast and you will still get the maximum profit.

Our case study will be on the GBP/USD during the decline in January and February of 2008. The market had retraced to resistance on 1/30 (point A.) Forex traders would normally evaluate a short spot trade to take advantage of a move to the downside but writing an option may be more attractive and provide a little more room for a volatile market. In this case, assume that a call was sold with a strike price 130 pips above the close price on 1/30 at 2.0000.

Pound

It may sound a little unexpected to sell a call if you are bearish but remember that now you are an options seller not an options buyer so things are reversed. You want the market to fall so that the call you sold will fall in value or expire worthless. If you were bullish and wanted to sell an option, you would sell a put because you want the market to rise and that put to fall in value.

In the case study assume that you sold a call with about 2 and ½ weeks until expiration on 2/15 and that call is worth $145 for a $10,000 lot. That is the equivalent of 145 pips.

What you want in this trade is for the exchange rate to stay below your strike price until expiration. In the image you can see two dotted line barriers that outline where you want prices to stay and within what time frame.

Let’s review the features of this trade.

1. You are opening the position by selling an option
You are the seller of the option, which means that you are being paid the premium when you open the trade. You will lose money if the market rises above your strike price but will keep the entire premium if the market closes at expiration on or anywhere below the strike price.

2. Breakeven is equal to the strike price + premium paid
The premium you are paid can offset some losses if the market rises near expiration. Your break even point at expiration is actually 145 pips above the strike price you sold (2.0145) because that is equal to the premium you were paid.

3. Time value works in your favor
This is an out of the money option with no intrinsic value. The entire premium is made up of time value which melts or reduces the closer you get to expiration and the more the market trends down.

4. Exiting the trade
You can exit this trade whenever you need to. If the market has fallen and the value of the call has declined to a desirable level, you can exit the trade by buying the call back for a cheaper price. You are then free to decide whether you want to sell another call for a larger premium. Alternatively, you can let the call expire on 2/15 when it has no value and keep the entire premium.

5. Margin:
Selling a call means you have an obligation to cover losses that may occur if the trade moves against you. For example, if the market begins to rise, the call will gain in value and could become worth more than you sold it for. Most brokers or options dealers will require you to cover this trade with a margin requirement.

As a general rule of thumb, you are usually going to have to cover an options position with 20% of the notional value when trading exchange options, which is a leverage ratio of 5:1. Options offered by forex dealers usually have a much higher leverage ratio closer to spot leverage rates. If you are a very aggressive trader, working with an options dealer rather than a broker may be the best way to go.

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Summary of benefits:

Selling forex options offers several unique benefits to the trader.

1. The market does not have to move to make profits. The market can remain relatively flat as long as it does not cross your break-even point and you will still be profitable.
2. Time decay works in your favor. As the option nears expiration, the premium or cost will fall every day, which creates profits for you the options seller.
3. Options are as flexible to market conditions as outright spot positions. You can sell calls if you are bearish on a particular pair or sell puts if you are bullish.
Comments Add New
AtlanaAnna  - Thanks.....   |2009-02-09 10:18:46
I really need to read this and see more examples of how this works especially
because of the way I trade. However, it's all a little overwhelming for me. I
would really love to see some 'live' examples. Learning all this is really hard.
I really wish I had a mentor holding my hand.
John Jagerson  - You're welcome   |2009-02-09 10:29:36
I will keep that in mind and see what I could do to provide a few more examples.
One of the best things you could do is paper trade this kind of strategy a few
times so you can watch prices change day after day and get a feel for how the
trade works.
JoeyJoeJoe Jr.  - Yes, paper trade   |2009-02-10 05:17:21
You should always paper trade any new strategy heavily before executing it in
the live market. You'll never regret the time you spend paper trading, but you
will regret the money you lose jumping in too fast.
Glen   |2009-02-12 11:21:43
Paper Trading sometimes leaves a false sense of excitement in one's mind. I done
what most people do when they start out trading FX, I made heaps of money with a
$50,000 Free account. Within six months of real live trading I lost over
$10,000. Email me if you would like to know more about my bad experience with
Brokers, "Expert" advisers, Forex Gurus, Forex Systems and many other
traps trading the currency markets.
Aleks  - Could you possibly recommend option brokers?   |2009-04-15 21:00:45
Hi John,

Thanks for your article, been watching them since PFX and find
you've been doing a great job,

I don't know if it would be allright for you
to do that here but could you give us the names of a few retail traders who
offer options on a MT4 platform that one could paper
trade?


Regards

Aleks
John Jagerson  - Options MT4   |2009-04-16 02:52:03
Aleks,

I am not aware of any dealer that offer options through the MT4
platform. As far as I know you need two accounts if you want to use MT4 and
trade options at the same time.
Franklin Adelaide  - [Sir only joking] Mr.   |2009-04-29 00:19:59
I would like to write Glen who wants to share his losing experience. Glen said
email me. Please what is the email address.
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