Jan-Feb 2020

Page 64

tactics

INTERMEDIATE

The Myth of the Protective Put Buying an expensive “portfolio insurance policy” hardly ever works By Michael Gough

Trying to maintain a hedge with long put options is expensive and requires nearly perfect timing. 60

traded fund. Trying to maintain a hedge with long put options quickly becomes futile as the high cost diminishes their potential benefit. Secondly, if the investor buys the put, it requires near-perfect timing for the hedge to be profitable. If, in the previous example, the market didn’t correct—poof, there goes $3 in option premium. Or, even more demoralizing, the market falls to 2,000 on the 46th day. Maintaining the hedge requires consistent put buying, and that cost can quickly add up, especially during a bull market rally like that of 2009 to present. Maintaining a consistent hedge with long put options has historically been an ineffective strategy. The table, right, presents statistics on the value of buying puts. From 2005 to the present, buying 45-day portfolio insurance with long put options in SPY has resulted in an average trade performance of -$19.00. Given the option’s delta and its probability of expiring in the money by expiration, these options should have been profitable around 5% of the time. In reality, they were profitable only 2% of the time. During this back-test period, the largest profitable long put option netted a gain of $1,788. Depending upon the timing, that may be enough to convert the cost of buying puts but would probably not cover the losses incurred in a long stock portfolio. Long put options can provide portfolio peace of mind, but they aren’t an effective tool for maintaining a consistent hedge because of their high cost and reliance on perfect timing. More effective strategies, such as portfolio diversifica-

Put off buying protective puts History shows that maintaining a consistent hedge with long put options just hasn’t been an effective strategy.

5 Delta Put Options Held to Expiration

Average P&L -$19 Expected Win Rate 5% Actual Win Rate 2% Maximum Profit $1,788

tion and delta hedging, can provide similar portfolio protection without the high cost. Michael Gough enjoys retail trading, and writing code. He works in business and product development at the Small Exchange, building index-based futures and professional partnerships.

Learn more about the cost of protective puts

PHOTOGRPAH: SHUTTERSTOCK

I

n Chicago, the weather can seem as volatile as the market. A day that begins with a 5% chance of rain can end with a torrential downpour. In a similar way, buying put options to protect a portfolio against a downturn seems a lot like grabbing the umbrella before heading out the door to work. The cost is low and the benefits can be huge. Put options can protect a portfolio during a downturn by locking in a selling price before the market crashes. Assume the market is trading at 3,000 and an investor thinks it could fall 10% in the next 45 days. To protect a portfolio, an investor buys the 2,700 put option for $3. Several days later, the market crashes to 2,000. With the 2,700 put option, the investor can immediately sell the portfolio for 2,700, which is a much better price than the current 2,000. Buying the put has protected the investor’s portfolio against the extreme down move. But this investment narrative is missing details. Firstly, market participants are already pricing in the possibility of a large down move in the market. This risk is manifested in the price of put options. On average, put options trade almost twice as rich as the same delta call options on SPY, the S&P 500 exchange-

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Catfish Are Biting in Love and in Money

6min
pages 14-15

The Real Threat of Deepfake

4min
pages 24-25

trends

7min
pages 39-41

The Greatest Tennis Player of All Time

7min
pages 42-43

The Myth of the Protective Put

2min
page 64

False Prophets Get It Wrong About Profits

2min
page 65

Real Expectations for Virtual Reality

6min
pages 54-56

Bluffing Is Real

3min
pages 44-45

The Greatest Tennis Player of All Time

6min
pages 42-43

Wrestling with Reality

7min
pages 39-41

Real Possibilities in Spatial Computing

7min
pages 31-34

Getting Real About The RealReal

6min
pages 28-30

The State of Deepfakes: Landscape, Threats and Impact

2min
page 25

The Real Threat of Deepfake

4min
pages 24, 26

Truth Be Told: News Is Biased (Odds Are … You Are, Too)

9min
pages 18-21

Fakery and the Authentication Economy

2min
page 17

Catfish Are Biting in Love and in Money

6min
pages 14-15

Truth Be Told: News Is Biased (Odds Are … You Are, Too)

10min
pages 18-21

2020 Foresight

3min
page 58

January 2020 (i)

7min
pages 63-65, 67-69
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