Option Block 377: Covering The Cost of Your Put

Published: Oct. 7, 2014, 5:35 p.m.

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Option Block 377: Covering The Cost of Your Put

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Trading Block: A mild day on the street. The dollar weakened the most in six months, dropping from a four-year high. U.S. stocks fell, with the Standard & Poor\\u2019s 500 Index retreating after touching its average price for the past 50 days, as small-cap shares resumed a selloff following a fifth weekly decline. Beginning Monday, October 6, 2014, CBOE will calculate the spot value of the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) using S&P 500 Index (SPX) options with weekly and standard 3rd Friday expirations that more closely bracket the 30-day target timeframe. Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) is splitting into two companies, using a breakup to become nimbler after failing to keep up with the shift away from the printing and personal-computing businesses it pioneered.

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Odd Block: Calls trade in Earthlink Holding Corp (ELNK), call stupids trade in Spansion Inc. (CODE), and put sellers in FedEx Corp (FDX)

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Strategy Block: Mike Tosaw revisits buying a longer term call option and then sell calls against it.\\xa0

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Mail Block: Listener Questions and comments

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Question from Allen Manning, Las Vegas - Hello everyone, I just started listening to the podcast, and I\'m really enjoying it! \\xa0I have a question about a strategy you\\u2019ve discussed in the past. As a covered call alternative, I was interested in possibly buying a LEAP with a 1 or 2 year expiration and selling monthly calls against it. \\xa0When I looked up a few stocks and ran some preliminary numbers, I noticed that the cost to purchase a deep in the money LEAP (about 80 Delta) option was usually higher than the total money I would make selling monthly calls for the duration of the LEAPS.

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What I did to get these rough numbers was to take the money earned from selling the initial 1-month call (after commission cost) and multiplying it by 12 or 24. \\xa0I\'m assuming one or more of these possibilities:

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1. The method I used to get these figures is wrong, even as a rough estimate.

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2. This strategy will only work with certain stocks/underlying that have optimal greek numbers.

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3. This method only works when assuming the underlying LEAP also appreciates in value to offset its own cost.

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4. Commission costs make this strategy less successful.

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Any information you can provide about this strategy is greatly appreciated. Thank you, and keep up the good work on a great program!

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Around the Block: What is going to happen in Hong Kong?

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