Why We Hate the Market but Love Google

One of Rick’s Picks’ specialties is introducing relative novices to seemingly sophisticated option strategies that work. If you don’t think you’re capable of doing “butterfly spreads” in an $800 stock like Google, click here for a free seven-day pass that will allow you to talk to some Rick’s Picks subscribers, including some options rookies, who have done it.  We can tell you right now, however, that multi-sided positions such as butterflies, verticals and calendars have a far better chance of succeeding than simply buying puts or calls, as retail customers are wont to do. Here’s the straight skinny: In the forty or so years we’ve been trading options, we’ve yet to come across anyone who has made money consistently by buying options on a bullish or bearish hunch.  Because options are so knowledgeably priced, that’s akin to betting against the house. And any bettor who thinks he’s smarter than his bookie is bound to come out a loser.

The way around it is to always sell puts or calls against options you have bought. That is what we did about five weeks ago in Google when the stock was trading for around $750. Specifically, we told subscribers to buy the March 840-850-860 butterfly spread four times for 0.20 ($20). This implied shorting two 850 calls while simultaneously buying an 840 and an 860. Our total risk, including commissions, was about $100.  Although we are perennially bearish on the stock market, that doesn’t mean we always bet against it. Most of the time, we prefer to take long and short positions at the same time. In this case our bullish play in Google was balanced by a put calendar spread in the Diamonds that gives us cheap leverage if the market falls between now and June. Certainly not impossible. Our counterplay in Google was essentially a bet that if the stock market were to explode to new highs early in 2013, Google would lead the charge.

A Quintupler

And so it has.  At yesterday’s peak GOOG was up more than $90, or about 12%, since we put on the position.  The stock’s steep rise has caused our butterfly spread to more than quintuple in value. It could have been sold yesterday for as much as $230, producing a theoretical gain of $840 on the four-spread position.  At its theoretical maximum, with Google trading for $850 when the March options expire next Friday, the butterfly would sell for 10.00 (i.e., $1000) — a 50-fold gain over the 0.20 we paid for it. In practice, however, we’ll be shooting for a comfy 3.00-4.00 ($300-$400) per spread, since the theoretical 10.00 is impossible to achieve.  At that point we’ll have no skin in the came, since, at the suggestion of a subscriber yesterday in the chat room, we advised selling 25% of the position for 1.30 or better. Several traders reported having done so, more than covering their entire position risk. They now hold “free” calls on Google. Hard work?  Visit the chat room and ask them yourself.  We don’t advertise.

  • Chris T. March 8, 2013, 4:18 am

    Pat, sell me some puts on that.
    expiry 12/31/2013, strike 15250
    you can’t lose!

  • Rick Ackerman March 7, 2013, 8:40 pm

    Note to MarkZ@gmail.com: Your phony e-mail address doesn’t cut it in here. If you want to attack me in my own forum, then man up and use your real name and address.

  • Rich March 7, 2013, 6:56 am

    Looking for a quick selloff to 1492 SPX…

    • Pat March 7, 2013, 2:22 pm

      No way, new all-time highs coming in SPX soon. SPX will go to 1700 by year end, Dow to 16000

  • Chris t. March 6, 2013, 4:55 am

    so did that sharp rise in Google actually push up the implicit vola? when you sell calls/ puts does that hurt,as it normally helps buyers, or is it irrelevant because hedged as well?

  • Oregon March 6, 2013, 1:27 am

    Sagacious providence. Thanks.