Quantcast
  Free Trial!
  Today’s Best Stocks!   

Most Popular Indicators for Futures Traders


E-minis/Futures

Trading Ideas

Daily E-minis Ideas


Trading Lessons

Strategies
Interviews
Glossary
All Trading Lessons


Daily Stock Setups

Connors Daily Battle Plan
Haggerty Professional
Kaltbaum Intra-day Set-ups
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
TM Indicators


Trading News

Markets Updates
Technical Alerts
Breaking News


PowerRatings

Short Term
Long Term
Charts


Indicators

E-minis/Futures
Strategy Finder
Stocks
Market Bias


Quotes

Markets
Stocks
Charts
Level II
Historical Data
Forex


Trading Contests

Up or Down




How to Use Options to Replicate a Futures Position
By Kurt Eckhardt | TradingMarkets.com
Stocks RSS

Kurt J. Eckhardt has been trading since 1982 when he began his career as an active floor trader in the CBOT Treasury Bond pit. Kurt is President of Eckhardt Research and Trading and its subsidiary Agility Trading. Agility offers both individuals and funds cutting edge technical strategies along with high performance instruction. For more information go to www.agilitytrading.com or email Kurt at kurt@agilitytrading.com.

We've all been in the following situation. You find yourself bullish on a particular market but unsure if your secondary support will hold. If we give the trade enough room to survive a test of our primary support we may wind up taking a larger-than-normal loss. If we don't enter a long position, we may miss an explosive move altogether.

Every now and then an opportunity presents itself that begs for us to be positioned. In these instances, the construction of a synthetic long, using a combination of options, can be a very useful tool.

A synthetic is merely an options trade that replicates a futures position. Normally defined, a synthetic long is the simultaneous purchase of an at-the-money (ATM) call and the sale of an at-the-money put. A normal synthetic behaves exactly like a position in the underlying.

For our purposes, we are going to build a synthetic long using options out-of-the-money (OTM) so that we may reduce our ATM exposure to moderate price swings.

Think of this trade as a naked collar. We are financing the purchase of an OTM call with the proceeds from the sale of an OTM put. Unlike with a collar, we hold no optionable position in the underlying.

As you should know, an ATM option has a delta of 0.5. That is, there's a 50% chance the option expires either in or out of the money. Deferred strike prices thus have smaller deltas - that is, less sensitivity to changes in the underlying futures price.

Let's illustrate with this hypothetical:

If in this case, if we buy a 4.60 call for the same price that we sell a 4.00 put (futures in this example are equidistant from each of our strikes) we will have spent little or nothing in premium.

However, we will have a position that at this moment behaves like half a future, and the synthetic will be margined at a rate commensurate with its delta exposure. Simply stated, the long 460 call will act like a quarter future and the 400 put will act like another quarter future. At expiration (whatever option month you choose), both options will be worthless if futures close between a range of 4.00 and 4.60. I call this a “no action zone.”

We give up the potential profit of a move from 4.30 to 4.60 in exchange for not having to take a loss if the market closes between 4.30 and 4.00.

Because options trade continuously just like the underlying futures, a lower corn price before expiration will manifest itself as unrealized losses on your open options position.

Likewise, if corn rallies before expiration your mark-to-market trade equity will increase. It's very important to not view synthetics as a method of circumventing either margin requirements or risk. Just because we have a minimal cash outlay doesn't mean our position has less exposure on a large move than futures. Remember that if corn is trading below 4.00 at expiration, we will be assigned a long futures contract.

Our synthetic merely transfers some of our upside gains in exchange for minimizing our nearby downside. In fact, you can always buy a further deferred OTM put so that your downside is limited altogether.

The dynamic of a synthetic versus a straight futures long is the ability to smooth returns during those periods when the market chops at the in-betweens. On the big moves you enjoy unlimited upside gains while in turn limiting your ultimate long exposure to only those prices below the put you sell.

Although a synthetic can entail greater dollar risk than buying a vertical call spread, the chances of incurring any loss at all are lower with the synthetic. The great attribute of options is the ability for traders to pick any risk profile they feel appropriate.

Kurt J. Eckhardt has been trading since 1982 when he began his career as an active floor trader in the CBOT Treasury Bond pit. Kurt is President of Eckhardt Research and Trading and its subsidiary Agility Trading. Agility offers both individuals and funds cutting edge technical strategies along with high performance instruction. For more information go to www.agilitytrading.com or email Kurt at kurt@agilitytrading.com.


Stocks RSS
Related Articles

PREMIER SPONSORED LINKS
TRADE CENTER

The TradingMarkets Directory
Stocks
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis
PowerRatings
Training Classes
Tools
Stock Scanner
Daily Market Bias

Options
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis

Forex
How to Trade
Forex Momentum Index
Pivots

E-mini/Futures
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Daily Market Bias

How to Trade
Stocks
Options
Forex
E-mini/Futures
Glossary

Tools
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Stock Screener
Quotes & Charts
Stock Indicators
Market bias Indicators

PowerRatings
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Industry PowerRatings
PowerRatings Charts
Training Classes
PowerRatings Strategies
Search PowerRatings

Trading Contests
Up or Down Stock Contest
#1 - Win $1000 every month

Up or Down Forex Contest -
Win $1000 every month


Premium Subscription Services
Short Term PowerRatings Free Trial
Long Term PowerRatings Free Trial
TradingMarkets Subscription Free Trial
Daily Battle Plan Free Trial
Gary Kaltbaum - Intraday Breaking Alerts Free Trial
Kevin Haggerty Professional Trading Service Free Trial
Forex Force with Mark Whistler Free Trial

RELATED SITES
Nothing but forex





All analyst commentary provided on TradingMarkets.com is provided for educational purposes only. The analysts and employees or affiliates of TradingMarkets.com may hold positions in the stocks or industries discussed here. This information is NOT a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Your use of this and all information contained on TradingMarkets.com is governed by the Terms and Conditions of Use. Please click the link to view those terms. Follow this link to read our Editorial Policy.

© 2008 The Connors Group, Inc.