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Rolling Options Trades (How-To Guide) - Options Adjustments - YouTube
Channel: Option Alpha
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Hey everyone.
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This is Kirk, here again from optionalpha.com.
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In this video tutorial, weâre going to talk
about the mechanics and logistics of rolling
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option trades.
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When you go through a roll, you're basically
taking one contract from one month to the
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next contract month.
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Letâs first look at it with an example that
we have right now which we can use from our
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broker platform.
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Alright, weâre inside our platform here
on Thinkorswim and weâre just going to look
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at this trade that we currently have, this
call spread in XRT.
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We entered this trade today, but just for
some reason, if I wanted to roll this position
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to next month and extend the trading timeline,
all we would have to do is just come in here
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and click on this little blue dot here next
to the trade and you can see, I can go down
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to âcreate rolling order.â
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The first thing I want to do is I just want
to roll the whole contract.
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Itâs this first one here thatâs listed,
this February 15, the February, the 97/98,
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97/98.
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Thatâs basically saying weâre just replacing
the current contract with a new contract out
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in the next month.
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When I hit âselect this position,â you
can see down below that what it does is it
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automatically defaults to the next available
month.
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This is where I think people get a little
bit confused, is that the system will automatically
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default to that next available month which
in this case, the next available month beyond
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our contracts that we have right here, the
February month which is the monthly contracts,
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the next available strike period or contracts
is the weeklies.
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Itâs going to default to that next one which
is FEB4 and you can see itâs right here,
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itâs FEB4 15.
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Itâs hard to read, I know with the red,
but itâs FEB4.
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What we want to do is we want to just make
sure that weâre rolling this to the next
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month.
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All we have to do is click here and go down
to the March contracts.
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You can see now what weâre doing here logistically
is we are 100% closing out of our February
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position which is this part of the order,
so weâre buying back on two short 97 calls,
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weâre selling back our two long 98 calls
and then we are exactly replicating that current
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position that we have out in March.
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Thatâs the logistics of a roll.
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Youâre basically closing out the position
that you have here in February.
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Weâre going to close this position and reverse
it, pay that cost to do that, whatever that
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cost is and then resell a position out in
March at the same strikes, the same number
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of strikes, the same width of strikes, everything.
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Notice that the same quantity is all in here,
the same strike selection is all in here,
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the same type is all in here.
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Weâre not doing anything different other
than just changing the contract month that
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weâre working with.
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And you can see the difference between buying
back our February options and selling out
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the March options is an $.8 credit right now.
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In this case, it meets some of the requirements
that we have for rolling a contract to the
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next month.
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Weâre going to talk about those here towards
the end of this video tutorial, but in this
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case, rolling it out to March meets that requirement
of taking in some sort of credit to extend
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the trading timeline.
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Now as part of this trade, we no longer have
36 days, we now have about 64 days.
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Alright, now that we're back here, I just
wanted to cover a couple of things that we
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need to consider before rolling.
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These are really things that you can use as
maybe like a checklist for rolling trades
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or even just things that you mentally ask
yourself and questions you ask before making
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a roll because you donât need to roll every
position.
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I think people when they get started with
rolling options and learn about it, they feel
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like they can roll every position, but itâs
not meant for every single setup.
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One of the things you can ask yourself first
is, âDo you have the same stock assumption?â
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Meaning if you are originally bullish on a
trade, are you still bullish on that trade?
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Do you still think the stock is going to go
higher?
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If you're not, now you think the stock is
going to go lower, why would you continue
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to roll a position from one month to the next
that has the same underlying fundamentals
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of making money if the stock goes higher?
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Thatâs the first thing you should ask yourself.
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The second thing is you got to ask whatâs
the trade off.
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âAm I getting a credit?
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Am I receiving money?â
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Like the example we just went through.
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âAm I receiving money to take on additional
time or am I paying to roll?â
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We are fans of if youâre going to roll the
contract, especially short premium contracts,
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you generally got to get paid some money or
take a credit on the roll because youâre
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extending the trade, youâre extending the
timeline, but youâre also increasing your
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risk potentially if the trade goes really
far in one direction or another the next month.
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We generally feel like you should take in
at least a credit to do this or if nothing
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else, a very small debit.
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If you end up seeing a trade where you go
through the mechanics of rolling like we just
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went through and youâre actually paying
money to roll to the next month, it's probably
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not worth making the trade.
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You are probably better off to close out the
trade and take the loss, reestablish a new
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set of strike prices that reset the probabilities
for you.
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In a case of if you have a call spread above
the market and the market is moving towards
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you, maybe it might be a good idea to close
out that call spread and reset for the next
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month some strikes higher that reset the probabilities
for you.
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And then the third thing that we always want
to ask with rolling contracts is, âIs there
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a better use of our capital elsewhere?â
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This really comes down to an overall understanding
of your portfolio.
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And really, is this the best trading opportunity
that there is because weâve been in situations
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sometimes where we can roll for a credit and
weâve still got the same stock assumption,
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so one and two are fine, we can roll for a
credit, still think that weâre bullish or
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bearish on the stock, but we need to use that
capital on a better trade.
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There's just something that's better out there
and oftentimes, I find that thatâs actually
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the case, is that when you look through a
bunch of different scenarios that are out
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there, sometimes thereâs just a better use
of your capital someplace else than continuing
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to tie it up in this trade.
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And honestly on the flipside of that, other
times, this maybe the best use of your capital
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just staying in this trade even if it's for
a small win or a small return, but there might
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not be enough out there, there might not be
enough volatility in the market to really
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justify moving to something else.
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You may be in the best trade that you could
be in.
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But just asking that question just gets you
thinking a lot more logically and streamlined
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about how to make these types of trades.
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As always, if you have any questions or comments
on rolling trades, feel free to add them in
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the comment section right below this video
lesson.
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Until next time, happy trading!
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