Sei sulla pagina 1di 2

IRON CONDOR TRADING RULES

These are the rules we use when trading iron condors and any similar options spreads. Note that these are time-tested rules of thumb: they arent iron-clad commandments that can never be broken, but they are strategic pointers that have proven useful. If you ever see us breaking one of these rules, dont hesitate to ask why theres probably a good reason!

1. ENTRY
Always enter a position at least 4-10 weeks prior to expiration. If youre wrong, the negative gamma risk outweighs positive theta risk at less than 4 weeks out. Look for a probability of success around 50-70%. Trades with higher probabilities of success also require higher levels of risk, so we usually avoid them. Never enter or exit a position the Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday of expiration week if possible. Market makers and even electronic servers are taught to tighten the bid/ask spreads during these times. Range-finding techniques: we use a Condor Options-branded secret sauce to determine the range of the spreads we work with. But well give you a hint: the formula includes ingredients such as standard deviations, historical volatility, implied volatility, and the price of tea in China.

2. EXIT
Exit 4-10 calendar days (not trading days) before expiration, and not before then. In other words, exit by time function, not by price. If you or we get really nervous about a trade, theres no harm in exiting half the position at 10 days before expiration and the rest at 4 days out.

3. THE RULE OF THIRDS


Lets say youre at the firing range, or if youre as gun-shy but golf-loving as Travis is, youre at the driving range. Youve got a target you want to hit, and only three bullets or golf balls with which to hit it. Do you fire all at once in rapid succession, hoping that your aim is okay? No, you take a shot, check your aim, adjust, and try again. The same idea applies here: if you are only going to put on three condor positions in a given month, why jump in all at once? Its much smarter to take an initial step, let the market do whatever it wants for a few days, and then initiate your second position. Wait a bit more, double check your aim, and then take on the third position. Commissions and slippage have been significantly reduced over the last several years, so while this rule would have been very expensive to follow 10 years ago, today it just makes sense.

4. CHOOSE YOUR WEAPON


We dont trade iron condors on non-index products, as you may have read on our FAQ. The biggest reason for this is that any individual stock will be subject to sudden price movement from events both expected (earnings, industry reports) and unexpected (management changes, big competitor success, etc.). The danger with these events is that they can easily create binary situations for our trades if earnings are coming out on a volatile stock, either a good or bad report could push the price outside the range of our trade, leaving us with a loser overnight. Using index products instead dramatically (in fact, almost completely) removes this risk. The only analogous event risks to indexes are market-external events like economic reports, geopolitical events, etc., and of course these are also risk factors for individual stocks. So instead of looking to GOOG, AAPL, XOM, or GE for our underlying, we prefer the most liquid and actively traded indexes. Until recently, this meant things like SPX, RUT, and OEX. But the introduction and increasing use of ETF indexes has made those instruments increasingly attractive, not least because they often feature tighter bid/ask spreads and electronic execution. So now we usually look to SPY, IWM, DIA, QQQ, XLE, and similar underlying instruments. These weapons give us greater flexibility, reduce slippage, and faster execution.

5. THE CONDOR FLOCK


*** This is a trade allocation strategy not taught by any other investing site. It entails putting on multiple iron condors with same expiration month but non-identical strike ranges and at different times. [DRAFT SECTION - more on this technique later.]

Potrebbero piacerti anche