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Don’t Fight the Tape. Insure Against It Instead.

Don’t Fight the Tape. Insure Against It Instead.

Posted December 2, 2024 at 10:00 am

Steve Sosnick
Barron's

The trend is your friend. Momentum, a style of investing and trading that emphasizes trend following, has been the driving force behind a string of record highs. But all investment themes eventually run their course. While it’s nearly impossible to predict when that might occur, it behooves investors to protect themselves.

Options, particularly short-dated calls, have become a preferred tool for participating in the rally. Ever-increasing numbers of traders have become understandably enamored with options’ potential for leveraged returns from limited cash outlays. Yet it is worth remembering that listed derivatives markets originally developed as a tool for risk transfer and hedging, not just speculation. Both have taken a back seat during the current market environment.

Hedging is a form of insurance. One can hedge against catastrophes, using options like flood insurance, or one can hedge against minor inconveniences, like carrying an umbrella. When we’ve barely seen a cloud, let alone a deluge, there is little demand for protection against rain or water damage. But that also means that protection is relatively inexpensive.

Markets operate on a continuum between fear and greed. Metrics that measure sentiment, such as the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, imply that investors are generally sanguine. At the same time, a wide range of valuation metrics for the S&P 500 index, such as forward price/earnings, price-to-book, and price-to-sales ratios, are at or near long-term or all-time highs. That implies investors are displaying more avarice than concern. If you respect the notion that one should be fearful when others are greedy, consider opportunities to protect your assets and use options as insurance.

A key problem is that options require traders to make precise decisions about time frames—and the shorter the time to expiration, the more precision is required. Those who failed to time a hedge properly find that their wasted cash outlay is just a small piece of the loss—the more significant loss comes in the item whose protection expired too quickly. That is why investors should consider longer-dated options for hedging purposes. Like many options professionals, I typically loathe paying an excess time premium. This is the exception.

There is no one-size-fits-all strategy that works equally well for all investors—everyone’s risk tolerance is different—but here is one way to consider what might work best for you. Ask yourself honestly how much of a portfolio drawdown you are willing to endure. It might be 5% for some, 20% for others. Think of that as your deductible.

Find a put option with a strike price at or somewhat above the maximum acceptable loss parameter you defined. Then, look for an option with roughly three months until expiration. Think of that as your insurance payment. Remember, no one really wants their homeowner’s policy, let alone their life insurance, to pay off quickly. Then, reassess your risk and roll your option accordingly about a month before it expires.

Some may be wondering why we advocate using longer-dated options and an early roll. Longer-dated options avoid the necessity of hedging on a weekly or daily basis. Short-dated options raise the risk of requiring one to re-hedge at an inopportune moment. Also, an option’s “time decay” is nonlinear. It accelerates rapidly as one approaches expiration. The early roll into another long-dated option somewhat mitigates against those effects.

Continually buying dips and chasing rallies has been working well for many, and no one should criticize a successful strategy—especially when it has allowed many to build valuable portfolios for themselves. We all insure various high-value items that we own. Our investments should be no exception.

Originally Posted November 27, 2024 – Don’t Fight the Tape. Insure Against It Instead.

Steve Sosnick is the chief strategist at Interactive Brokers.

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7 thoughts on “Don’t Fight the Tape. Insure Against It Instead.”

  • Anonymous

    What do you mean by rolling an option? can you explain

    • Interactive Brokers

      Thank you for reaching out. Rolling an option means that you sell the contract(s) that is expiring, and buy a contract in the same underlying with an updated expiry and strike price. Use the Roll Option tool to roll an expiring option. Please review this FAQ for instructions to roll an option: https://www.interactivebrokers.com/faq?id=337466406

      We hope this helps!

  • Anonymous

    If you’re long a December and you buy a spread to sell that December and buy a January then you rolled your December option

  • Anonymous

    The problem with hedging stocks is risk alignment. If your portfolio comprises index ETFs then an index put (S&P, NASDAQ, Russell etc.) is relatively inexpensive at the moment, but for good reason, implied volatility is low (can be sub 20), and index stocks tend not to suffer the volatility (standard deviation) of many of the individual stocks currently in favour; like tech, saas and AI related. So if your portfolio just comprises women high beta stocks like NVDA then an index put option (eg on the QQQ) isn’t going to offer you complete protection from a sell off in tech. NVDA, PLTR, TSLA could fall 10-20% while at the same time the QQQ might only fall by 5%. High beta stock options usually have a higher IV (up at 45-50 or greater) than the index options, even for the long dated ones. So buying puts for individual stocks is much more expensive making the insurance strategy a marginal call.

  • Anonymous

    Sorry predictive text seems have inserted “women” instead of “mainly” in my previous post. Apologies.

  • Anonymous

    Great article!

    • Interactive Brokers

      Thanks for engaging!

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