InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 294
Posts 9254
Boards Moderated 2
Alias Born 04/22/2005

Re: leemalone2k3 post# 3

Sunday, 03/23/2008 8:55:26 PM

Sunday, March 23, 2008 8:55:26 PM

Post# of 626
Exiting a Bear Put Spread early is appropriate under the right conditions.
Exiting early can prevent you from taking the Max loss
Lets say the stock drops slightly then rises back above the breakeven price of 68.54
with no signs of resuming the downtrend, it is a good idea to exit early
Stock falls to $66.00 during the next few weeks then climbs up too 69.00 with one week till expiration
The short put (sell) would have lost some of it's valuue due to time melting away
The long (buy) put will have added some intrinsic value and will most likely still have some time value left
You buy back the short put and sell the Long put to exit the trade

69.00 is above the breakeven price of 68.45
You sell the 70 put for +$1.00
And you buy back the 65 put for -$0.05
Your net loss would be -$0.50
Our intial net debit was -1.55
-1.55 +1.00 - .05= -0.50


Review:
1. Find an optionable stock in a bearish trend. Fundametals are not important.
2. Perform TA, enter at a bounce off resistance or a break of support
3. Sell a put option with a strike price that is below the current trading price of the stock ( do this only after entering the long leg) and buy a put with a strike price that is higher than the put we sold: this creates a debit
An extremely bearish investor might buy a strike price that is out of the money
4. Enter the trade by "buying to Open" the put with the hiher strike price and "Selling to Open" the put with the lower strike price. If possible, enter the trade as a single position instead of legging into the trade (one side at a time)
5. Monitor your trade on a daily basis
6. Close out the trade if the stock starts to show signs of strength or is rising unexpectedly
Exit by "Sell To Close" the put with the higher strike price and "buy to close" the put with the lower strike price
7. Always find out what your brokers rules for exercising a spread are just in case the call you sold is exercised.

An Easy way to remember how to play credit or debit spreads:

When it is a bullish spread, you Buy a Strike price below the stock price and you sell above the price you bought. These are known as Bull Put (credit) and Bull Call (debit).

When the spread is bearish, you sell a strike price below the stock price and buy above the price you sold. These are known as Bear Call (credit) nd Bear Put (debit).

That is the final chapter for vertical spreads!

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.