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  • Rolling Weekly 10-Delta Put Options Prior to a Holiday Weekend: A Real-Life Example with Etsy, Inc. (Nasdaq: ETSY) – January 24, 2022

    One of the ultra-low-risk strategies developed by BCI in 2o20 involved selling weekly 10-Delta cash-secured puts. This created a greater than 90% probability that the puts would not be exercised (expire in-the-money or with intrinsic-value). Since 2020 – 2021 represented an unusually low interest rate environment, annualized returns of 8% – 15 % looked pretty darn good. Since our contract obligations are for 5 days, Monday holidays caused a significant decline in that week’s annualized returns. No big deal since it’s only a few weeks per year. This article will offer a solution, with pros and cons, on circumnavigating this Monday holiday issue as it relates to this strategy.

    Observations on rolling weekly puts on expiration Friday

    I have noticed that by rolling the puts between 11 AM ET and 1 PM ET on expiration Friday to the following weekly expiration Friday, the annualized returns will not be impacted to any significant extent. The downside is that we are now undertaking weekend risk which is not the case if we simply trade between Monday and Friday.

    Real-life example with ETSY taken from one of my portfolios

    • 8/30/2021: Sell 2 x $200.00 9/3/2021 puts at $0.42
    • 9/3/2021: ETSY trading at $220.38 at 1 PM ET
    • 9/3/2021: The cost-to-close the 9/3/2021 $200.00 put was $0.04 per-share or $8.00 for the 2 contracts
    • 9/3/2021: The 9/10/2021 $202.50 put (Delta of -0.9) generated $0.47 per-share

    Brokerage account statement showing the ETSY put options being rolled out-and-up retaining the 10-Delta status

    ETSY: Rolling Puts Out-And-UP

    Annualized Calculations for the 9/3/2021 contract expiration ($200.00 put)[($0.42/ ($200.00 – $0.42)] x 52 = 10.94%

    Annualized Rolling calculations for the 9/10/2021 contract expiration ($202.50 put)[($0.47 – $0.04)/ $($202.50 – $0.47)] x 52 = 11.07%

    Discussion

    There was virtually no difference between the original annualized returns and that the rolling returns despite 1 less day in the contract. Certainly, one trade does not make a scientific study, but I’ve done this a few dozen times (as of writing this article in September 2021) and all had similar results. The advantage of this rolling is higher returns for the 4-day week and the disadvantage is the weekend risk incurred. Since holiday weekends are usually quiet, the risk is limited but present, nonetheless.

    Author: Alan Ellman

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