CitationLover
Aw, Nuts!
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2003
- Posts
- 3,316
Anybody that happened to own any of those puts before their big crash, rose that same wave of volatility to huge gains combined with the stock move. I'm sure people were selling back those options with those types of profits....or at least hopefully they did.
AMR's volatility took off on Oct 3 with all of the downward pressure of the stock crashing. It has since retreated a bit, is still pretty high. If it continues to fall, then selling would be a good idea, especially if you play it in the correct direction. One of the analysts rated AMR as a buy now, so that may encourage the price to rise some too.
Implied Volatility is an interesting thing. Have you ever watched a stock's options (both put and call, ie strangle or straddle) just before an earnings report, and after? I've seen the stock jump 5% overnight on earnings, but both the put and call lost value thanks to that same IV lowering you are talking about.
You definitely can't trade an option the same way you trade a stock.
Just saying.
Buying a put for insurance is one of the dumbest ways of insurance. Especially an out of the money put which the $3 strikes and lower were until this week. What ends up happening is you buy the put when you need it and all that vega is built into the option.
Bankruptcy is a real risk. I'll have to look at the implied volatility in amr when I get home but I imagine it's high for the front end month (October).
Then again the 190/195 put spread I had on NFLX was looking really good for Sep exp until the wed before when it tanked from 200 to 150. Ugh got too greedy.
For an AWESOME explanation of options, etc. Check out tastytrade.com and watch some of the shows and clips. Tom is an absolute genius with the stuff.
As per amr the rumor I heard was they wanted to sign contracts then declare bankruptcy so they can start the whole negotiating process over.
Last edited: