Which Bearish Option Spread Should I Trade? - Spread Trading - YouTube

Channel: Option Alpha

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Hey everyone.
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This is Kirk, here again at optionalpha.com where we show you how to make smarter trades.
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In today's video, we’re going to break through one of the questions that I get a lot from
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members and students that I coach and that’s trying to figure out if you should trade a
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bearish debit spread or a bearish credit spread.
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If you’ve decided that you’re bearish on a future direction of some stock or ETF,
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that's great.
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But should you choose to trade a debit spread or a credit spread?
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Basically the question is, “Should you choose an option strategy where you’re a net buyer
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of options or a net seller of options?”
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In this video, we’ll help you figure it out or help you figure out which strategy
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is best for you for the current market and it all starts by analyzing current implied
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volatility rank or percentile.
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Let’s go here to our broker platform on Thinkorswim.
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I've got currently up a stock chart here for Wells Fargo which is ticker symbol WFC.
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What you’ll notice is that Wells Fargo is just in a little bit of an uptrend here and
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we’re just going to assume at this point that you think maybe this uptrend is coming
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to an end and the stock might come back down lower.
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You’re looking at this chart and for some reason, your technical’s or your support
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and resistance lines tell you that the stock is going to go lower, so you’re definitely
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bearish on the stock.
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Now, the question becomes “What strategy do you choose?”
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What we’ve got down here below is we’ve got a chart of implied volatility.
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This is where it all starts with choosing the right strategy.
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When implied volatility is relatively low going back over the last year, then we favor
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choosing a debit put spread in this particular instance.
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Right now, implied volatility is currently sitting at about 18.6% on Wells Fargo and
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you can see that that is pretty low going back over the last year.
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If we just draw a line in the sand here going back to the left, you can see that implied
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volatility has been much higher than that many, many times before in the past and there
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was really not too much more room here for implied volatility to fall.
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In this case, we're going to look at that IV percentile and we can see that implied
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volatility for Wells Fargo is in the 23rd percentile, meaning that over the last year,
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implied volatility is sometimes higher than this about 75% of the time or can be higher
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than this about 75% of the time.
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This is a relatively low implied volatility market for Wells Fargo right now which means
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we have to favor strategies that make us net buyers of options because a rise in implied
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volatility will help our position.
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In this case again, we’re going to choose with Wells Fargo to do a debit put spread
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and trade this directionally bearish.
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Let’s say that you wanted to trade something else, maybe like GLD which is gold.
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Gold is currently on a huge move up and for whatever reason, you think the technical's
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or some support resistance lines suggest that gold could make a very big move down in the
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next couple of days or weeks and you want to trade it bearish.
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We’re going to do the same thing and we’re going to look at where implied volatility
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is in its historical range for gold and you can see it's relatively high in this case.
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A reading of .2132 which is 21.32% on GLD is actually a relatively high level of implied
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volatility and you can see that the IV rank is 71%, meaning 71% of the time over the last
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year, implied volatility is lower than where it is right now in gold.
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This gives us a great idea of where gold might go in the future as far as implied volatility.
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It's definitely going to go down or it has a better chance of going down than up at this
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point and what we’re going to do is we’re going to target strategies that take advantage
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of implied volatility going down and that strategy in this case would be a credit call
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spread above the market.
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You would look to sell options somewhere above the market, maybe at a 128 strike or a 129
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strike, but you’re definitely looking to be a net seller of options because implied
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volatility is higher.
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I really hope this video helps out.
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Like I said before, if you have any comments or questions on these trades or how to distinguish
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between a debit spread and a credit spread, please ask them right below in the lesson
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page.
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Until next time, happy trading!