YHOO tonight !

23 Jan 2007 In: Earnings

I am looking for Yahoo earnings tonight. Again I am playing backspread on this and my breakevens are $25.36 and $29.59. I expect roughly 8-10% volatility crush after the earnings are announced AMC. If Yahoo reports negative and the stock falls below $25.36, I will still make about $40. However, if it announces positive and the stock rises, then beyond $29.5, the returns will rise in accordance. The Margin requirement is $215 (I received $0.35 credit) per spread.

Yahoo Jan 07

Cheers and profitable trading,OptionPundit

Cheers and profitable trading,OptionPundit

, , , ,

Let’s talk about standard deviation that is a basis for some of the my income trades that I play for my personal portfolio.

Let’s first understand what is a standard deviation, also referred to as “sigma”?Standard deviation is the most common measure of statistical dispersion, measuring how widely spread the values in a data set are. If the data points are all close to the mean, then the standard deviation is close to zero. If many data points are far from the mean, then the standard deviation is far from zero. Say it other way, A standard deviation is a unit of measure for volatility, and measures how tightly data is bunched around a mean, or average.

In the option trading world, this may be defined as how tightly stock or index prices are bunched around the current price. Some stocks like KO don’t range too much up or down from the current price. Other stock like AAPL can vary hugely. The standard deviation tells you about the potential percentage move or the dollar move a stock or index might make by a certain date. You can say that for a $100 stock, the standard deviation is either 10%, or $10.

The standard deviation is based mainly on an estimate of future stock or index volatility, a future date, and the current stock or index price. It also incorporates interest rates, but to a lesser extent. 

  • The higher the volatility, the bigger the standard deviation.
  • The further the future date is, the bigger the standard deviation.
  • The larger the stock price, the bigger the standard deviation.

You may use historical volatility, but in my opinion implied volatility is a better estimate of future volatility. Here is how you can calculate stadard deviation:
1 standard deviation = stock price * volatility * square root of days to expiration/365.

Let’s take an example. With SPY trading at 142.00, and March expiration 53 days away, and a volatility of 11.6%, what is the 1 standard deviation range for the SPY at March’07 expiration?         142.00 * .116 * square root (53/365) = 6.27

The above means 68% of the time, the index will be 142+/-6.27 by Mar’07 expiration. This assumes that stock and index price returns are normally distributed. One standard deviation covers the same percentage number of occurrences regardless of the size of the standard deviation. That is, the $100 stock with a $10 standard deviation will be between $90 and $110 68% of the time. And a $20 stock with at $3 standard deviation will be between $17 and $23 68% of the time.

For your information, +1/-1 standard deviation covers 68% of occurrences, +2/-2 standard deviations cover 95% of occurrences, and +3/-3 standard deviations cover 99% of occurrences.
So, how do you use standard deviations to trade? You could create your own trades based on your outlook , risk/reward of the market/Index.

-Concepts are general and lead thoughts are based on conversation in ToS’s trader’s lounge.

Earning Update : PLT, BLK, PCP and ENR

23 Jan 2007 In: Earnings

With reference to my post last evening here, all four earning plays are up. BLK opened up by $5, $ENR is up by $7, PCP is up by $4. PLT is up by $0.5

Profitable trading, OptionPundit 

About this blog

OptionPundit© (OP) is designed for novice as well as serious option traders. It is a stock & option trading blogsite that is dedicated to the following objectives: read more ⇒




OPN Performance

This assumes a $10,000 starting and fully invested capital. The current phase started when OPNewsletter was re-opened in Jan'08 for Feb'08 expiration. OPN Month is counted as 3rd Friday of each month same as US Equity option expiration day. Comparison with S&P500 or Dow is not shown as it's unfair to expect from such large institution to deliver high returns. I would rather compare with my own target.

OPN Performance (Current) - http://sheet.zoho.com

The Phase-1 assumes from May 2007 till Jan 2008 and starting fully invested capital of $10,000.

OPN Performance (Phase-1) - http://sheet.zoho.com

Some Inspirational Videos (Refresh Page for New Video)

Michael Jordan “Failure” Nike Commercial
Video Widget by Daiko

OPNewsletter Waitlist

Read Customer Testimonials, Part-1, Part-2, Part-3

Performance Matters (OPN)

  • May'07 +22.3%
  • Jun'07 +33.5%
  • Jul'07 +32.7%
  • Aug'07 +17.9%
  • Sep'07 +6.9%
  • Oct'07 +57.3%
  • Nov'07 +17.1%
  • Dec'07 (Chill-out)
  • Jan'08 +14.8%
  • Feb'08 +11.6%
  • Mar'08 +16.5%
  • Apr'08 +9.2%
  • Commission included from May'08
  • May'08 +1.7%
  • Jun'08 +11.1%
  • Jul'08 +7.1%
  • Aug'08 -13.0%
  • Sep'08 +6.2%
  • Oct'08 +0.0%(Opening)

Stay Informed (RSS or Mobile)

Subscribe on your mobile

If you like OptionPundit, Leave a comment

Been There, Done That

goggle-finance.gif

reuters.gif

palmbeachpost.gif

screenhunter_01-jan-19-0335.gif

op-on-aol.gif

chicago-sun-times.gif

Reading Spotlight

Read here why I think it's a MUST for an Option Trader.

Find out here why I am recommending below book. Use "optionpundit" code to order it from Riskdoctor.com to get 10% discount.

Find out here why I am recommending below book.

Archives

.Etc