Friday, August 28, 2020

Math Wins

While "Math Wins" (AKA "Let's Move Money") is looking for $UVXY to rip, I'm always looking for it to slip.

Here's my math for today:

While thieves are looting from one door of your business, as long as you are ringing the register to a greater degree at the other door, you can close up shop at the end of the day and count your profits.

Follow me on Twitter: @grapeswhiz

Thursday, August 27, 2020

That's a fast steamroller

It may not have been me, but I feel quite sure that some people picked up more than pennies today (and that others came out "flat," and by that I don't mean no profit or loss - I mean what the steamroller does to you.)

Below I get schooled by a 15-year-old hedge fund manager:

Who has stories today about surviving (or not) the VIX carnage?

Follow me on Twitter: @grapeswhiz

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

grapes trades on

Party on, Wayne. Party on, Garth. Trade on, grapes. 

Watch this space to see if and what I feel like talking about. Let's talk first about the conversation I see tonight on Twitter.

This man, who goes by the name of "Bat," if I remember correctly, has expressed his observation that the VIX is acting in an uncharacteristic manner this afternoon. Fellow trader with a cat for an avatar postulates that the Fed will be the arbiter of which way the horse manure drops when it does. Plop, plop, plop - VIX will do the drop, drop, drop. Let's all crowd around (at a safe distance) to see it happen tomorrow.

Follow me on Twitter: @grapeswhiz

Friday, May 1, 2020

Mayday

See new trades in tab. 

Starting TODAY!  (edit as of August 2020 - don't go look for those tabs - they are currently down for repair, but will be back up eventually.)

Friday, March 8, 2019

Clean slate

Closed a complex, multi-month trade that wasn't looking profitable at many points along the way, but knowing how the security I trade behaves, I managed it well enough to come out the other side with a profit. I could have kept it going, but chose to close it and re-short a different quantity with different associated options, along with one different security added in to the mix. Details on those trades will be forthcoming as they unfold. See the "Collar and other strategy" tab for the final outcome of those and other trades made since April of 2018.

Thursday, August 16, 2018

A narrow escape

Considering that I was looking at an unbooked $4,500 loss yesterday with no end in sight, this grand total isn't much, but I'll take it.

A lesson in how NOT to trade.  Multiple overnights with naked shorts, and much spinning of plates (the calls), which did actually net profits for me, but ultimately put me in line for more risk than originally intended.

August 9th -16th
Sold short 3,000 UVXY at 8.20, credit $24,594.37.  Bought qty 30 UVXY Aug 10th 8 strike calls for 0.25, debit: -$770.37. Max risk: -$170.37
Sold all UVXY Aug 10th 8 strike calls for 0.645, credit $1,915.52. Profit booked: $1,145.15 
Bought qty 30 UVXY Aug 17th 8 strike calls for 1.00, debit: -$3,020.37. New max risk -$1,275.22
Sold all UVXY Aug 17th 8 strike calls for 1.18, credit $3,519.52. Profit booked: $499.15. 
Bought qty 30 UVXY Aug 24th 8 strike calls for 1.12, debit: -$3,380.37. New max risk -1,136.07
No calls held at many points; risk unlimited.
Sold all UVXY Aug 24th 8 strike calls for 1.68, credit $5,019.50 
Bought to cover 3,000 UVXY at 9.179, debit -$27,541.95
Grand outcome: +$338.85

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

See the Completed Collar tab

Although there aren't many completed collars in there (any?)  Well, I'm not going to detail every move here, but you can see the details there.  I'm using money I really can't afford to carry short in UVXY, thus the need for protective calls.  The calls cut into my profits, in every case, but they also have the potential to bail me out, so they're a necessary cost of doing business in this case, for me. 

I do try to finesse the entries so that I gain an advantage by waiting on either the shares or the calls, and usually that ends up working against me.  But sometimes it helps, as in June 18th.  I picked up a lot of gravy by hanging back a while.

The order (of the shares and calls) is not necessarily indicative of the order I executed the trades.  I might record them in either order, even though I executed them the other way around.  It's hard enough to find and record all of this, and I'm not trying to recreate it by the second.  Although of course the basic strategy (opening both and then closing both) is recorded as it was actually done.  Usually I open the shares first, and then the calls, but it could be the other way around.  At times I have gotten greedy and traded the calls out in the middle of the trade, allowing the shares to ride naked before covering them with replaced calls. This is detailed, of course, if it was done.  Results have varied (beneficial or not beneficial to me.)  Many times I close the calls and let the shares ride for a few minutes to the remainder of the day.  Occasionally I have closed all the shares and then re-opened them for a day trade, although I don't think I've done that without having ditched the calls first.  The last thing I want is some depreciating calls hanging around, so I tend to get rid of them ruthlessly (there could be instances in which they increase in value, but I don't think I've encountered that in a while, or if so, I just looked the other way, because I didn't want to see what I missed out on, and had already moved on to the next trade.)

Here is a clip of the tab which you really should be reading if you want to follow along.  The tab is right here, if you're having trouble finding it.




Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Another winner. What's for dinner?

No need to complete the collar when the funds are there waiting for the taking, so take them I did.  See completed collar tab for details.  Should I start another one?  Why not?!

The tl/dr is:

+$605.58

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Half is better than nothing

Closed the reverse collar (described in previous post) before expiration.  See this page for details.  Don't be afraid to click on it.  It's just the completed collar rundown page.  Or if you are suspicious or wary about clicking on links, just navigate your own darn self up to the link above and feel accomplished at pressing your finger directly there, to get to the same place and view the details.

I bought back the puts, I sold off the calls.  The shares didn't exactly go over the falls...

[end poem]

... so I just covered them.

Monday, May 14, 2018

How to make $1,000 in three easy steps

Would you like a $1,000 paycheck in one week while doing basically nothing to earn it?   Well, nothing's free, so you'll have to pay with your nerves, at least for a little while, and that means you'll have to put something at risk, initially.  But what if you could construct it so that you know what you'll lose, worst case, and then construct it further so that you won't lose anything, if you're unlucky enough that you're passed over on the day the paychecks are handed out?  Would you like to try for $1,000 or nothing?  Follow along with what I did.

Step 1:  Buy 20 UVXY calls at the 12.00 strike, May 18th expiration for $0.75 each.  The multiplier is 100, so this will cost you $1,500.

Step 2:  Sell 2,000 shares of UVXY short at 12.30.  This requires enough margin to be permitted to do that.

Step 3:  Sell short 20 UVXY puts at the 11.50 strike, May 18th expiration for $0.45 each.  This will bring in $900.

You've now only effectively paid $600 for the options (setting the credit received for the puts against the cost of the calls), and you have thirty cents of profit you could reap on the shares, if you actually exercised those calls to cover the shares at the strike of 12.00, which comes out to $600 coming in to offset the price paid, so that's all you'll see, worst-case.  A total wash, with zero paid and zero lost.

Yet, should things go your way, you'll see a profit of up to $1,000.  Should UVXY end up below your put strike price, and the shares end up put to you, you'd use them to cover your short, so that's 12.30 minus 11.50, or a $1,600 profit on the shares, and as detailed above, you paid $600 for the combo of puts/calls.

Max loss:  $0

Max gain: $1,000

Expiration date:  May 18th


Friday, April 27, 2018

Follow-up to yesterday's post - completion of trade

Collar closed without completing the put side; calls sold and then shares bought to cover as such:

April 27th: Quantity 17 of April 27th UVXY 114.50 calls sold for 0.75, or debit $1,261.20.
1,700 UVXY bought to cover at 15.015, credit $25,530.45.

Grand total for the trade: -$277

Note that original risk was $1,356.70, reduced sequentially to $659.70. Calls were closed earlier than shares on expiration day to maximize recovery of the shares without degradation of option prices counteracting that recovery, in order to seek final outcome better than the max loss of $659.70 if options had been exercised.

See detail:


See new tab at top "COMPLETED COLLAR (or other spread) HISTORY" for ongoing summaries of collars without detail and narration.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

April 18th collar started, expiring April 27th

UVXY collar started April 18th:

April 18th:  Sell short 1,700 UVXY at 14.61.  Credit: $24,838.07
April 18th:  Buy 17 UVXY April27th 14.50 strike calls for 0.90 each.  Debit: $1,543.70

Initial risk:  Cost of calls minus potential profit on shares if exercised:  0.11 per share profit would be $187.  Total risk: $1,356.70

April 19th:  Sold above calls for 1.29.  Profit booked: $635.
April 19th:  Bought same calls for 1.12, cost $1,917.70.   New risk, minus profits:   $1,095.70

April 20th:  Sold above calls for 1.37. Profit booked: $397.
April 20th:  Bought same calls for 1.25, cost $2,138.73.  New risk, minus profits: $919.73

April 24th:  Sold 10 of the above calls for 2.33. Profit booked: $1,062. 
April 24th:  Bought same 10 calls for 2.05, cost $2.060.12. Add to cost of other 7 calls bought on the 20th for 1.25, cost of $880.66, for total cost of $2,940.78. New risk, minus profits: $659.70

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

All in a day's collar

As I imagine a sculptor might look at a fresh block of clay, wood or stone, so I gaze at the unused cash in my account, sometimes resentful and irritable at its dormant, unproductive state.  In a world in which nearly all of us can use more, should any cash sit there doing nothing?  I know what bankers have to say about that.  And I know what advisors recommend.  However, I need to get places faster. So I put my cash out there on the front line.  For the industrious, there is no slacking when there's a job to be done. Up and at 'em, rise and shine.  Get to work and better not whine.

With examples (meaning, using the actual cash I put to work today) I'll demonstrate my most frequent method of stuffing the coffers when I'm not happy with what's already in there.  Here is my situation: my trades require a lot of cash in reserve, but I don't like that cash to lie down and take a nap.  While my main strategy requires long-term monitoring and long-haul planning, there is a portion of cash that I need to keep liquid at or at least liquidatable with short-term notice, and there are ways to work that cash with only days-long commitments to a medium-risk, high-potential-return venture.

In this case, I decided to send $25,271.50 onto the playing field in the form of 1,600 short shares of UVXY from 15.21, and 16 long UVXY calls, expiration April 20th, strike 15.  How much did I actually spend, though?

Cash is never spent on short shares; rather, an amount of cash equivalent to the value of the shares must be present in the trader's account as collateral for the borrowed shares, which eventually must be returned.  Here's how it works: Upon my request, the brokerage locates and makes available to me shares that will be sold to someone else in the pool of traders lined up to buy, with the notation that they are out on loan from me, and I must return them to the brokerage, no matter how I have to get them and no matter what I have to pay. When they're sold to someone else (instantaneously), the proceeds of that transaction are deposited in my account. In order for the brokerage to feel good about participating in this hot-coal walk with me, I must keep the ever-changing market value of the shares in my account all the while, so there's no worry that I'll be unable to obtain them and return them to the brokerage. Here's the beautiful thing, though, or it could be ugly, depending on circumstances, but it's the entire essence of short-selling: No matter what the price of the shares to the buyer, all the brokerage wants back from me is the shares, so the trade can be closed and we can pretend nothing ever happened.  When I short-sell them at 15.21, as I did, I can pay the same to buy them back, or I can pay more, or I can pay less.  Paying more would satisfy the brokerage, but I'd be disappointed because with a credit of 15.21 per share and then a debit (to buy the shares to cover) any higher, I'd end up with less money in my account than when I started.  Paying less would be great, though - what a dream it would be to pay $14, $13, $12, or even $10 per share to close the transaction. Why stop at $10? Short-sellers always dream about paying as close to $0 as possible.  They want to pay 1 cent, ideally.  In my 1-cent dream, I'd get a big credit from the brokerage for short-selling the securities, but I'd only have to pay a little to end my obligation regarding the shares (to close the trade by buying to cover), so I'd come out way ahead. But realistically, paying anything less than the amount of the credit received is the hope of any short-seller at the outset of a transaction.  Of course, there are risks.  More on that below.

So, at the push of a button on my desk, $24,330.30 in fresh dollars flowed into my portfolio, as 1,600 shares of UVXY flew somewhere else at the speed of light, bought by someone else, but requiring return to the brokerage like a library book you can entrust to any friend or even a stranger but you need to take back because it's your name on record regarding responsibility for that valuable book. Obviously, I hoped the share price would decline so I could return the UVXY by paying less for it than the credit I had just received, and keep the extra as profit.

Not wanting to take on unlimited risk, though, I decided to pay for a contract that would limit my loss, and I chose an expiration and a strike price for the contract. The calls cost $941.20 total.  But I didn't stand to lose all that, should my trade not go as hoped.  That's because holding them conferred to me the right to buy up to 1,600 shares of UVXY at the contracted price of $15.00 each.  I had sold UVXY short at 15.21, and exercising the call options would mean I'd realize a profit of 21 cents per share if using the calls to buy to cover all 1,600 shares.  Profit on the shares would total $336, and setting that against the $941.20 paid for the calls would mean my loss, in this event, would be $605.20.


As seen in the chart, at 10:27 AM, I sold short 1,600 UVXY at the price of 15.21.  Watching and waiting for a drop in price for calls, I put off the associated call purchase until my nerves wore out, and I bought 16 UVXY April 20th 15 calls at 11:11 AM.  Here was my plan, and if you follow my blog posts you will understand the reverse collar strategy:  I hoped to sell puts for a price that would reimburse me for the purchase of the calls, and also allow me to make a profit on the short shares.  The strategy is a calculation limiting my profit to a capped amount, but limiting my loss so that I won't take any loss at all, should the security move in the direction I had not hoped.  To be precise, I would not need to sell puts that would bring in the exact 0.58 per contract that the calls cost me, because as mentioned way above, there was a profit on shares baked into the calls, in the event that I'd have to exercise the calls (due to a rise in UVXY above my shorting price.)  In this case I could subtract the 0.21 profit from the 0.58 paid and I'd need to sell puts for only 0.37 at the strike of 15 to set up my reverse collar as a guaranteed max-loss-of-$0 outcome for me.  But of course, I was not going to sell them at the 15 strike unless I could get a lot more for the puts, because that example calculation would not allow me to make any profit at all, so my goal was to sell puts at any lower strike, like 14.50, 14, or whatever market movements would allow, and ideally, bring in enough to cover my call expense, or more.

Let  me say briefly that in my history of setting up these reverse collars, I don't think I've ever held them all the way to expiration of the options.  But I've completely set them up numerous times.  At least as many times, I only set up the calls before abandoning the search/wait for puts and closed the whole thing out.  And frequently, I do it right away, because I don't want to find out what subsequent days will do to the expensive calls I just purchased.  I don't really want to pay for calls and let them turn into lost money for me.

In this case. at 3:00 PM I decided that making $600 in just a few hours was too good to pass up, so I covered the shares for 14.57 and I sold the calls for 0.35, bringing in a net profit of $619.14.   Then, also as seen in the chart above and in the graphic below, at 3:23 PM, I decided to start the whole thing all over again by shorting the same number of shares from 14.27, but then abandoned the whole plan at lightning speed after looking at call prices I didn't like, and I covered the shares just 14 minutes later for 14.20 (and how about my capture of the day's low in doing that?)  That added another hundred dollars to the pile, and my take for the day was $720.

How does this compare to my plan?  Well, I never completely set it up, but I was aiming for the 14.50 puts, and wanted to sell them for the exact 0.58 I had paid for the calls, although I was willing to be flexible.  This is what the prices looked like for the puts I hoped to sell, while I checked back throughout the day. 38 cents wasn't good enough when I really wanted 58.  Although, if you are really a math wizard, by the time you are finished reading this whole article, you'll see that I could have just taken the below-depicted 38 cents and sealed the deal for the same outcome I eventually got (the difference being I'd have to wait until expiration to close the whole trade.)


 Below is a chart of the price of those puts throughout the day:


Had I waited, and had I been the trader to catch the tippy-top of the price action in UVXY April 20th 14.50 strike puts, I could have received 0.72 per contract for the 16 I intended to sell, or more realistically, it looks like it was hovering at the 0.65 level for a while, which was more than I needed to reimburse me for the call purchase, and enable a 0.71 per share profit on the shares, which comes out to $1,136, plus any gravy on the options.  At 72 cents, it would be about 14 cents profit on the calls and puts netted together, or and additional $224.  I am really counting my chickens here, eh?  Or telling a theoretical fish story.

It comes down to this:  I was looking at a maximum of about $1,100 profit on this deal, not including the extra I might have gotten with that great 65 or 72 cent premium on the puts, bringing it up to $1,300 or so, but the reverse collar, even when perfectly set up, also conveys a risk of making no profit at all, or a profit anywhere between nothing and the max determined at the time of complete setup.  And I'd have to wait days to get the max profit or NO PROFIT, being locked in if wanting to try for max profit, had I set up the complete collar.  I decided to take the immediate $600 and run.  And then add a bonus to nudge up the day's total.




Monday, December 25, 2017

Prudent and Rational

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/12/26/prudent-and-rational

Going back to December 4th, I left off in the middle of the day and promised to be back soon and detail the trading for the remainder of the day.  Though time has passed, has SVXY been doing anything different?  Have stocks been doing anything other than more of the same (new all-time highs) and has VIX been doing anything other than pedal like a bicycle between 11 and 9 and back again like the rising and setting of the sun, reliable and repetitive?  VIX nearly reaching 12 (a big spike, these days) on December 4th enabled me to have a little fun in the afternoon before bringing in all my chips and doing a final tally.

Follow the numbered steps and note the timing, down to the minute, that was required to bring in a few dollars on this ship-in-a-bottle.


 1. At 11:25 in the morning, I sold short a modest mess of SVXY at the price of 114.05.

2. At 1:13 and 32 seconds I bought calls for the 115 strike, December 8th expiration, for 2.75 each in a quantity to match the aforementioned mess plus the disaster-sized portion I planned to sell short immediately after purchasing these.

3. At 1:13 and 58 seconds (pretty close to immediately after the above step), I sold short 2.5 times the quantity I had originally sold short, this time at the price of 115.38.  If you are good at algebra, and if you knew my final basis, you could probably compute the quantities.  Anyway, I now had a landfill-sized mass of short SVXY at an average price per share of 115.00 even.

4. Way before the end of the day, at 2:45 and 48 seconds, I sold to close the calls for 1.94 each or translated into the multiplier of 100, that's $194 against my $275 buying price, or a loss of $81 per contract.

5. Nineteen seconds later at 2:46:07, I covered all shares at 113.75, or a $1.25 profit per share, coming out to $125 profit per block of 100 shares.  My net profit equaled $44 per block of 100 shares.

Why did I do any of the above?  Well, obviously, I was trying to capitalize on some downtrend in SVXY when I sold short mid-morning.  When, an hour later, it appeared obvious that I had mis-timed my short, I decided to get trader's revenge by doubling (plus) down.  But this would be an unwieldy amount of short shares. To limit risk I bought calls so that, should disaster strike and SVXY rise to the moon every day the rest of the week without stopping, I could cover at the same price I had sold shares short by exercising the calls.  My cost would be the total cost of buying the calls.  So, I bought calls at the 115 strike and then rolled up sleeves (kidding; I was working so fast there was no time to roll up sleeves) and shorted the appropriate additional number of shares less than 30 seconds later.  Funnily, without trying to achieve this down to the penny, when I sold the new shares at 115.38, this averaged out with my original shares to produce a new basis of exactly 115.00.

Now I had a small country's GDP worth of SVXY short and protective calls to match that risk.

After a nice trip down the stairs around 2PM, and not being clairvoyant, I decided to exit the whole set of obligations (referring to the shorts) and expensive privileges (referring to the calls). It looked like I could sneak out without anyone realizing I had cut a city-block corner by going in one revolving door and out the other and in between, had been lucky enough to see cash sticking out of the lobby trash can.  I played with fire and escaped being burned and decide to get out while the gettin' was... well, possible.

Of course, seeing the rest of the day unfold made me wish I had left the shares uncovered a little while longer; outrageous victory would have been mine.  But notice that hike up right before the tumble down the mountainside right after I exited the position:  Could I have withstood the red ink on those shares, had I dispensed with the calls and just held the shares naked?  With SVXY touching 114 and a half compared to my 115 basis, and having just taken a calculated loss by ditching the calls, I'd say NO.  Since I had booked an $81 per contract loss on the calls, I couldn't close my shorts for less than a 0.81 difference, or I'd go from gain to even to loss faster than a one-minute candlestick can form.  114.50 from a 115.00 starting point would put the whole deal solidly into money-losing territory, and how could I know how much higher SVXY would climb?  This illustrates the necessity, in the prudent and rational side of my mind anyway, of being disciplined enough to close the whole trade out at once, or at the very least, watch it by the second if choosing to go naked-and-reckless.

With the calls sold at a loss and the shares covered at a gain bigger than the call loss, I declared the day a success, resolving that I wouldn't play with dangerous quantities of volatile securities again, at least until the next day.


Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Click the Crypto to profit

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/12/06/clicking-on-cryptocurrencies

I'm not normally a multitasker, but let me tell you, when procrastinating, I can really do it.  Last night, while doing some boring but necessary tasks on the right screen of my desktop and wanting some mental stimulation on the left screen to liven up my evening, I logged into my gemini.com account and starting clicking around.  First of all, anyone wanting to know how easy it is to trade bitcoin or ether may be assured that it could not be more streamlined.  I believe my cat could do it.  Hey - wait!  While I was in the kitchen, who sold for that price?!?  Just kidding.  The truth is that some crumbs must have been present on the keyboard recently and my dog "helped" by cleaning up and at the same time, adding a bunch of new people on Twitter.  (Joke there, too, about the unsavory Twitter contacts - but it could happen!)  Keep pets away from your keyboard to ensure you are the one making the trades.

Everyone loves Bitcoin, but it so happens I wanted to vanish into the ether last night.  Let me explain how I set my account up: Online, by filling out some fields and providing some proof of identity, and it took just a few minutes - I was shocked at how fast I was up and running.  As to how I funded it: The simplest way you can imagine, by transferring (via ACH bank transfer, although you can also wire) funds from my checking account.  In my case, $400 cash was sitting there (more like $402 and some change after having done some trading earlier in the fall).

Here is what I did last night as an exercise, challenging myself to simply buy, sell, buy, sell, and bring my account up by at least $1 each time.  Of course, the greater purpose everyone (including myself) would have in mind would be to trade more or less frequently than I did, pay more attention to entries and exits, and maybe increase the size of trades in order to get better returns for the effort.  For my purposes last night, though, I wanted to pay the least amount of attention possible to my left screen while I did other things I had to do, and demonstrate to myself that in a semi-automated fashion, I could pull a few dollars out of thin air.

Let's get right to the buys and sells:



To simplify things greatly so we don't get bogged down in math, the fees for these trades were running about $1.01 apiece, so my goal was to set my sell prices $2 or so higher from my buying price, to allow for the fee and some profit.  Then I'd turn around and set a limit order to buy at a few dollars lower than where I had sold - again, to allow for a fee and to get in lower.  "Buy low, sell high."

Of course, after buying, if I saw nice high prices, I would go ahead and get one instantly, rather than set a limit order and walk away.  Previously I had used market orders exclusively, but last night I learned the advantages of limit orders.  Currency moves fast, and it's not inordinately risky to examine the current bid/ask pool and set a limit for something that seems within reason at the moment.  Very frequently the fill comes sooner than you'd think.  Unless unloading a position at a certain juncture in time (like, immediately) is critical, setting a limit order is a valid/convenient method.

As you can see in the detail above, I raised my account in steady $1 increments by hitting the sell button only four times most often using my simple formula of , "What did I buy for?  Add $2 and set a limit order to sell for that."

Gemini allows users to download spreadsheet data and here is a sample showing the above detail in a different format:


One transaction appears different than the others and it's only because it was split into two; this must have been some kind of internal accounting and was visible only in the xls data and not on the user end as it does not affect anything I do.  In viewing the transactions, you can see that whether I chose to end in cash or in ETH, my value increased:  Greater cash value, greater ether balance.

If you are interested to see what the trading screen looks like, I have captured one; see below.  I believe you may have to click to expand it, since it's too large to display in full detail in this column.

In this screen capture you can see:  My open limit order at the very bottom, and if you look at the trades competing to execute you'll see mine at the next-to-bottom line.  On the right is a series of alerts informing me of current status of my account and open and executed or cancelled (if I were to cancel one) trades.  The tabs at the top confer the ability to transfer funds (linking a checking account makes it easy to electronically transfer or wire money in or out), and obviously to buy and sell.  Upon clicking buy or sell, the pull-down bar offers a few options - choose one and you're good to go.  In this case I was using buy ETH with USD and sell ETH for USD.

I decided to leave my account in cash overnight, since I didn't want to take the chance on ETH declining while I held it.  I think I could have sat up all night and traded, but people have to sleep some time.  I'm not putting down people who play games, but I simply cannot relate to wasting my time collecting the bananas or blowing up the imaginary island.  I witnessed (in the reflection I could not avoid seeing it) the person one row ahead of me on the train the other day playing solitaire or some other move-the-cards game for the entire 40-minute ride.  If I am going to be clicking and scrolling, I want the prize to be some money.  I find great motivation in the prospect of advancing myself financially, especially when I can do it with nothing besides my brain and a display.

For more detail on the trading platform, see this shot of a trade I placed this morning:  A limit order to buy ether using the total amount of USD in my account (this is the way I placed each buy order) at a price no higher than 443.77 (thus, it's called a "limit," since that's the top limit of what I agree to pay.)


I outlined my bid in yellow.  I placed the bid under the current, but just a penny over the next guy in line behind him.  Very soon it was filled, and note that while I had been working with a quantity of ether in the .87 to .88 range last night, I now have 0.91358172 ETH.  I'm currently waiting on a sell order to bring my account up yet higher.  Then I'll set a limit order to buy lower.

While these amounts gained are small, my point in performing this exercise was to make sure I'm well familiar with the platform (and there's nothing to it, so the warm-up is almost instant), experiment with low-effort strategies to generate return just by riding the waves of bid/ask prices, and gain insights into buying and selling habits that may enable me to move larger amounts around for greater gain.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Don't trip over the dip

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/12/06/don't-trip-over-the-dip

Not sure what everyone else was thinking/doing/cursing about during Friday, December first's Big Dipper, but it just so happened that I had set up something I expected to be far less exciting than it turned out to be.  On what I thought was just another regular, normal, tired-bull-run morning where every day is approximately exactly like the one before, I had paid for expensive insurance so that I could play a little game and take my chances on picking up some goods.  I paid admission so I could spin the wheel, in other words.  Sure, I could have done it without paying, but I wanted a guaranteed exit, should the game go south.  I hoped I would not have to use my exit ticket, and that I could sell it to someone else.  Actually, my real hope was that the ticket would burn to wispy ashes and float away in the wind, with my shares rolling so far downhill that no one remembered why they liked that security, ever, in the first place.

As pictured, on what seemed like a do-nothing, experience-no-fun regular old day, I sold shares of SVXY short at 9:45AM at the price of $111.10, and then at 9:50AM bought the appropriate number of December 8th 111 strike calls to protect those short shares at a price of $3.80 each.  This means I spent $380 for each block of 100 shares of SVXY sold short.  The worst outcome to me, after a week, would be that I'd lose the full value of the calls, exercising them to cover the shares at just ten cents less than I had shorted them for, and my profit on the shares would only offset my loss by $10 per contract.

Imagine the expression on my face when returning from the bathroom or somewhere to see the purple bars.  Although watching them intently and intensely, I didn't catch the ideal profit.  I had to make a judgment call on whether the move might continue or might evaporate completely, and I exited at a place that really, only I could rightly criticize.  This is because I criticize myself irrationally at times; I wish I caught the bigger profit, I wish I got the lowest tick, I wish I profited x1000.  But...  for a trade intended to last a week, that could have lost $370 per contract, it wasn't such a bad way to spend an hour.  I bought SVXY to cover at 104.57 and then recovered $2.00 per contract by unloading the calls on some willing buyer. Tallying it up, $180 was lost on each contract and $653 gain was booked on each lot of 100 shares.  Set them against each other and it came out to +$473 per group of 100 shares shorted.


Later in the day (see inset) I snacked on some pretzel stix... oops, I mean TVIX, by shorting at 7.94, then covering at 7.88, and later shorting again at 8.00 and covering during the last minute of the regular trading session at 7.79.

Traders don't say "TGIF," they say "TGIM" and like a kid asking "Are we there yet?" I wasted time reading tweets and drinking coffee until the market opened today, December 4th.
 
Second trading day of December, and everything feels funny.  It's the perfect kind of day to go hunting for some money. Okay, I promise - no more rhymes.  They're way more fun to write than read.  Let's go ahead and contrast prudent caution / reckless greed.

Discarding and ignoring all the online, news story, and water cooler (if I ever got near a water cooler) chatter I'm sure took place over the weekend (let's consider some of that to be coffee pot chatter, as I chattered to myself in my own mind near my own coffee pot), I decided to do a little intraday top-calling.  Let the charts tell the story:


Not one to wait and watch for too long, I took a clean shot at the tires of the bandwagon that all the Twitter bulls were boasting about so hard that their coat buttons popped and put each other's eye out.  It was as if they had accomplished this gap up by their own cocksureness; to listen to them was to need to clutch a bucket.

SVXY short from 114.66 hit my account in a quantity I really shouldn't be dealing.  So I bought the other side by plunking down $266 per lot of 100 shares in the form of December 8th 114 calls. This way SVXY could go parabolic and I'd know my maximum possible loss, which would be $2.66 per contract minus $0.66 profit on the short if I ended up exercising those calls to buy to cover, or $2.00 per contract translating to $200 per lot of 100 shares. Of course, I hoped I'd slink my way out of this one, too.  Well - soon enough, some action got started and I counseled myself into admitting to myself that a profit right away is better than a possible loss situation every day from now until Friday.  Computing that I could book a nice profit by closing the whole deal out immediately, I thought about that but instead decided to get my unwanted chaperone out of the way by paying him to leave and go bother someone else.  Taking only a $66 loss per contract, I disposed of the calls for $2.00 each.  Now I could let my short shares run.  Tell me: Wouldn't you want to, having shorts and looking at a chart like that?

Well, having forgotten that I had saved the above graphic, I made a new one just now with information repeated, except you can see the trajectory of SVXY for the remainder of the day and the ugliness of the chart with the yellow stop-set line gone (as, once again, I returned from momentary absence and experienced outrage to see that my stop had hit.)


Note how nice and neat that turned out (and I didn't plan it that way, but orders were filled for slightly better than my limits.)  Having lost $0.66 per contract on the 114 calls, I knew I could take a profit as small as $0.66 from my shorting start point of $114.66 and break even, so I simply set my stop on quote for $114, knowing it would execute for some price a few cents above or (probably not) below that trigger.

In hindsight I wish I had taken the fat profit staring back at me as I set the stop.  But none of us know which way the ticks are going to go, and this time they made somebody else's dream come true.  If you think I just sighed and said, "Oh well..."  Well, not quite.  "Trader's Revenge" for me means looking behind door 2.  The next post will detail the remainder of the afternoon of Monday, December 4th.

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Turn Your Collar Inside-Out

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/09/14/turn-your-collar-inside-out

Ever make a sandwich so big and poorly constructed that the second you pick it up, the insides propel themselves out and all you're left with is a few pieces of dry toast?  Me neither, but I can envision it happening.  Keep stacking the vegetables without regard to sound principles of sandwich engineering and you may end up with a floor salad.  Well, I set out to make a short sandwich (reverse collar, you could also call it) on Tuesday, September 12th, hoping for the best, as always, but not preparing all that well for the worst.

Around 3:50 PM, I noted that SVXY had made a quick and ferocious climb during just three days, and I thought I'd take a chance on a little roll back down the hill, the way manual transmission cars tend to do at red lights when traffic is stacked up immediately behind them.  I had no brilliant thesis or compelling can't-lose calculation on my side; I simply sized it up with my bare eyes and took a chance by shorting some shares.  Yet I know that the financial winds produced by Mr. Market can be foul indeed, and I didn't want to be stuck on the wrong side of Party Town during the ongoing public festivities called "Market Rises Forever."  I thought I'd better buy myself an expensive emergency-use-only ticket out.

Searching around for protective calls proved unappealing as SVXY continued to climb for the last few minutes of the day.  I placed an order; no one liked it and it didn't go through; I withdrew the offer and made the uneasy decision to wait until the next day.  There ended my trading day, with SVXY short in my account from 82.55 but the rest of the world trading it at 82.73 (and even higher after the close.)

Next day rolls around and SVXY just keeps climbing.  VIX keeps sinking to the middle of the ten range and sits comfortably there.  Indexes can't decide what to do but SVXY keeps rising, and my blood pressure goes up a little with it.  I still haven't bought the protective calls by mid-day, so I resolved that I'd do so, just after shorting a little more and therefore raising my average shorting price.  At 10:39 on Wednesday morning, September 13th, I shorted some more from 84.11, and for a few minutes it looked like I had made a smart move.  But wouldn't you know it - SVXY rose higher and when it touched 85.00 even, I made a move to double my exposure using the justification that I had not yet bought the protective calls and might as well get the whole thing in place so I could begin the process of learning whether my trade had a chance or not.

At 12.52 PM I shorted from 84.95 to bring my shorting basis now to 84.01.  Though I would have rather waited for better call prices, I thought I should be responsible and go ahead and buy my protective calls.  I like the idea of maximum short profits but I don't like the idea of unlimited damage to my account via naked short shares in a quantity I might be completely incapable of covering.  So I put up the cash to buy an appropriate number of calls for Friday, September 15th for the 84 strike and paid a $1.59 contract price for each one of them (that's $159.00 per contract.)

Now I know a worst-case scenario for this short:  If Friday comes and SVXY has continued to climb, I can exercise my calls and buy to cover for the same price from which I shorted.  The only cost to me will be what I paid for the calls.

To break even at expiration, I need SVXY to fall below my basis by at least $1.59 (I'm ignoring the extra penny right now, pretending I shorted from $84.  I'm also ignoring any commissions so this would be off by several dollars here and there.  Let's keep it simple, though.)  All right, let's be precise, although ignoring commissions.   I shorted from $84.01 and if I want to recoup every last penny spent on those calls, I can just let them expire worthless and buy SVXY to cover at a price $1.59 (the price paid for the calls) lower than my shorting price, which comes out to be 82.42.  If it falls even lower before I close the short, then I net a profit.  If it falls below my shorting price, but just by some amount less than $1.59, then I recover some of the cost of what I paid for the calls.  But the price of the calls is the maximum loss I'll have to realize.  That's where I stand now (as I write this on Wednesday, September 13th.)  I have something else up my sleeve, but let's get to that tomorrow.  Before I go, though, let's talk about whether my long calls will be worth the price paid.  When I shorted SVXY, I opened myself up to unlimited risk.  If, on options expiration day, SVXY ends higher than a certain price, which can be determined via this calculation: the price from which I shorted PLUS the price paid for my calls (or 84.01 plus 1.59 which equals 85.60), then it will turn out to be worth the money, at least, assuming I would not want to keep the short open past that day.  Because that cost would be the same as if I had never bought the calls, yet decided to cash in the short (at 85.60) and take a loss of exactly the same amount per share (1.59) as what it turns out I did, instead, pay for the calls.  Every penny SVXY ticks up costs me more money, but at least now I know a maximum cost to me, assuming I exercise my calls before expiration.  Had I not bought those calls, the sky would be the limit as far as potential damage to my account.  Let's adjourn until tomorrow (Thursday), now.


**MINOR UPDATE Captain's Log, star date Sept. 13th 4:30 PM**  I could not resist the tempting profits on the long calls and kept a small fraction of them, selling the majority of them for 2.10, when I had bought them for 1.59, or a profit of 0.51 per contract.  The intent is to wait for a lower entry point and re-buy them... OR NOT.  (insert unsettling laughter sound here, echoing and distorted.)

Writing on Thursday, September 14th during the pre-market hours, I can now report that I bought shares to cover my short shares in a rag-tag assortment of lots, some of them at my preferred price and some not even near it (when am I going to learn to place my limit orders with more generous, um... limits?) and that, of course, is because I had to cancel a partially filled order and put it through again for a profitable, but not nearly as profitable, price.  The 84.01 shorting price turned into cover prices of 83.68 and 83.94.

 
  
Now, darned tootin' glad that I sold most of the calls yesterday, I turn my attention to selling the remainder of the calls at my first possible convenience and/or at the moment I sense that the price of those calls won't keep going up.  Options often go from valuable at varying prices to not valuable at all before expiration, as everyone knows, so my task will be to monitor SVXY which is influenced by the VIX which has something to do with the party-forever market-never-stumbles culture that SPX currently resides within.

As you can see in the pink ink above, between one paragraph and the next, I was able to get rid of the last contracts, and for 1.65.  So, having bought at 1.59 and sold for 2.10 and 1.65, with profits also made on the short shares, I wrap up this trade without complaining.  It was meant to be so much more, though.  Why does the title mention a collar?  I had envisioned the short going my way immediately at which time I would sell out-of-the-money puts.  Paying myself back for the purchased calls is the idea; I've done it before (see previous blog posts) but this time I didn't even get to pop my collar.

Everything went against me multiple times, but I was able to get out and avoid plenty of damage I signed on the line for.  I started with a naked short, and even held it overnight, which of course exposes the holder to unlimited risk.  Then I bought calls with a known possible total loss of $159 per contract.  Instead, I ended up making $41 per contract, and $14.75 per each 100 shares of the short, so added together, I made $55.75 per each block of 100 shares of SVXY shorted.  The security went from 82.55 at the outset of this trade to 85.04 at 9:48 AM today, September 14th when I closed the last of the trade out.  How did I profit from a short of SVXY when it only went up while my trade was open?

Careful handling of all the dangerous moving parts, that's how.  And I'm glad I was able to do it.  Until next time...

Monday, April 24, 2017

Outcome: Net Fun

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/04/29/outcome-net-fun

Shorting UVXY is sort of like making pancakes and flipping them in the air and catching them with the pan.  You can entertain yourself and others like that for a while, and you just may accumulate a large stack of perfectly browned piping-hot pancakes, but sooner or later some raw batter is going to hit the kitchen floor, and that is not much fun.  And what if everyone eats up all your pancakes in the meantime, and you're stuck with nothing but a kitchen-floor disaster? Well, on Thursday, April 20th, I felt the ever-present hunger for a little short UVXY profit, so I shorted some shares.  But only with the keen awareness that I was lending out borrowed shares backed up by capital I really did not want to cut into and hand over in an "oops - bad timing" debacle.  It could also be likened to writing a check as a security deposit, not wanting that [huge] check to be cashed - because what if the damages might turn out to exceed the amount I have in the bank?  Sky's the limit with UVXY and I wanted to be along for the ride down the slide, but not for anything involving high-and-rising share price heights.

I could not or did not want to watch every tick and possibly experience the sickening sight of a huge and maybe nearly-immediate loss in value of my short shares.  So instead I paid a fee to set a limit on the amount of risk I'd be exposed to and I accepted a time limit within the fee's contract.  My fee was 0.65 per April 21st (the very next day) 19.50 strike call contract and I bought the appropriate number of contracts to go with my short shares.  I had shorted at 19.53, so the plan was:  Should I choose to exercise those calls, I'd be buying shares to cover at 19.50, making a $0.03 per share profit on my short, bring my loss at that point to 0.62, or $62 per block of 100 shares.  The hoped-for scenario at this point, conversely, was that UVXY would drop enough from my shorting price of 19.53 to pay me back for the 0.65 cost, so that I could buy the calls back for some small recoupment or even see them expire worthless, but I'd make so much when closing the short that I'd find the 0.65 to be worth the sleep-at-night value it conferred.

I wanted to reduce that cost, though, by selling some puts, even though that action would then limit the profit I could make on the above-described short with protective call.  I priced out puts tick by tick (see, there's no escaping watching the ticks, but at least I had breathing room now) but didn't like the fact that I'd still be locking in a loss, even though it would be a maximum worst-case loss.  Puts were going for prices lower than what I had paid for the call, so I couldn't pay myself back fully.  To be a hair-splitter, I had a 3-cent head start on the short, so I could accept a price 3 cents lower on the puts and still pay myself back.

It turns out that a series of nice red ticks brought the put prices down to where I was able to sell the same expiration puts on the 19 strike for 0.63 (see first orange arrow on chart), nearly the same as the price I paid for the calls.


At this point I could ignore the whole trade and check in late on Friday to find out whether it was a zero or the full profit or something in between.  Zero would materialize if UVXY would end higher than my call strike.  I'd exercise the calls, buy to cover for a 0.03 profit per share, and I'd have the full put premium received of 0.63 to set against the 0.65 I had paid for the redeemed calls, and you can see that this would come out to completely flat.

Something in between would materialize if UVXY would end between my strikes.  I'd be able to take some profit on the short, and premiums would offset each other (as described above, with the call expiring worthless against the full premium retained on the put).

Maximum profit would occur with UVXY ending below the put strike.  I'd lose all of the 0.65 I spent on calls, I'd be assigned on the puts, keeping the premium of 0.63 received, and at the strike price of 19.00, my short profit would be 0.53 per share.  This would net out to 0.51 per share, or $51 per block of 100 shares.  I was all set, though, with this can't-lose scenario and could sit back and do nothing.

But wouldn't you know I went and tinkered with this, taking vital parts of the machinery apart, early Friday morning.  UVXY opened so high and rose so much higher (see second yellow arrow on chart) that within seven minutes of the market open I bought back the puts to close for 0.20, envisioning a reversal of this hopefully-aberration-like open and then unfettered short share profits beyond my wildest dreams.   It seemed like a good move - for a little while.  Most of my short put premium had been locked up as a booked gain, and nothing was holding me back from limitless profits to the downside on UVXY.  But as UVXY zig-zagged higher for hours, I realized my mistake.  I had gone from max-loss-zero to a max-loss equivalent to the premium I chose to give back in my impetuous buy-to-close.  Should UVXY now rise above my call strike, I'd be able to buy to cover safely and essentially flat, but I'd be out the 0.65 cost of the calls with only the 0.43 profit made on the puts to offset it, or a 0.22 per contract/$22 per block of 100 shares loss.  Prices under my [no longer existent] put strike were looking unlikely by midday, and I kicked myself for turning my can't-lose trade into a might-lose-moderately trade without thinking it through.

I started looking for ways to bring in whatever premium could be recovered from the call side.  I already had a maximum loss set out at this point and while I couldn't likely recreate the no-loss scenario, I could manage the same max-possible-loss by changing the criteria for the day's outcome.  And the outcome loomed close, with only an hour and some minutes left in the day.

At 2:46 PM, I sold the calls for just 0.06 against the 0.65 I had paid.  That doesn't seem worth much, but I used that in determining the price for my stop-on-quote.  In order to break even-ish, I set the stop for my short UVXY shares at 19.33, while they were trading at around 19.12.  Within a few minutes my stop almost hit (see chart below.)  I believe it was within 2 cents, and you can deduce my mental state when I tell you that the person looking over my shoulder suggested that I "go and do something else for a while."


Soon, enough, a cascade of tumbling UVXY prices appeared like Niagara Falls, so - finding myself suddenly at the bottom of the falls - I climbed aboard the first boat I could see through the mist without stopping to read the name first, and grabbed the 18.98 bid to get rid of my short shares and put this story in the history books.  You can see the price bounce that ensued (back over 19.25 for a second), making me glad I hadn't waited and analyzed and computed even one darned digit before hitting "market" to unload that short.  To recap:  My known-max-loss went to no-loss, then to a different known-max-loss, and ended up at a profit not too far from the original max profit I had computed.  With an ultimate cost of 0.59 on the calls, 0.43 profit on the puts, and 0.55 profit on the shares netting out to +0.39 overall, I consider this a two-day adventure I'd be happy to have again, at least after I shake the 2-cents-from-stop experience (better than triggering-stop-in-one-tick) out of my brain and try to remember only the good parts and the fun.

Friday, April 21, 2017

Short some shares and call me in the morning

This may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/04/21/short-some-shares-and-call-me-in-the-morning

Who wants to buy high and sell low?  Why would anyone buy calls before the closing bell and sell them to someone for half price the next morning when the opening bell rings?  When would anyone feel okay about buying for 88 cents and then selling for 45?  Answer: When the calls are just a wrapper, a box designed to keep something else safe while in transit, like a shoe box protects the merchandise on the delivery truck so that your purchase isn't thrown on the porch one shoe at a time by the people in the step van.  Of course, that shoe box may convey to you an unflattering, ill-fitting pair of shoes you don't like or aren't ultimately able to use, but it may surround and present you with just the thing you were looking for; you may have something valuable in your hands that needed some insuring.

On Wednesday, April 19th just before the close, I decided to take a short position in UVXY.  Because I didn't want to spend a lot of time or put a lot of money at risk waiting to see if this short would produce gains for me, I decided I would limit the losses a wrong-way short might put me in line for and I bought calls at-the-money expiring just two days later.  The shares were shorted at the price of $20.08, and I bought one 20 strike call for Friday's expiration at the option price of 0.88 or $88 for every hundred shares of stock.  At the very worst, if UVXY would rise and never come back down to refuel, I'd be able to exercise my calls on Friday and turn that into a buy-to-cover at the price of 20.00, which would actually net me an 8-cent profit per share.  So it would be an expensive shorting venture, bringing in only $8 per block of 100 shares on the short and paying $88 to make sure I wouldn't have to buy the short back at some damaging, unpleasant or downright scary price which could be any price, really, when you're thinking about UVXY.

So, of course I didn't really want to pay that much, and I had in mind the idea of selling puts at the next strike down, so that I'd have the chance to bring in some profit on the short shares, but I'd also be able to pay myself back for the calls I had just bought.  Problem:  19.50 strike puts were going for prices not high enough to fully pay myself back, so I thought I'd wait until the morning and see if better prices could be found then.  So I kept these short shares with only protective calls to accompany them overnight.


In the morning, UVXY had dropped so sharply that I abandoned the idea of selling puts and instead covered my shares at 19.40 for a 68-cent per share profit, or $68 per block of 100 shares, and then I disposed of the calls by selling them to whoever shelled out 0.45 per contract, and against the 0.88 I had paid, that was 0.43 I recovered or $43 per contract.  Setting my final cost of $45 per contract against the $68 per block of 100 shares I brought in, that ended up being $23 per block of 100 shares on this short, and I was pretty happy with that.  Considering that the trade was opened a few minutes before closing time and in the can a few minutes after opening time, that's not bad for a coffee and ding-ding (closing bell and opening bell) trade.


Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Rewrap and return to the store

This post may also be read at: http://www.cboe.com/blogs/options-hub/2017/04/20/rewrap-and-return-to-the-store

Before the paint was really dry I started tinkering with the reverse collar set up yesterday.  The first thing I did, acting upon a suspicion (you could call it a wish) that the VIX would sift downward the next day (which is today, as I write this), is that I closed the short put.  To recap the spread, it was as such, all of it opened yesterday, April 18th:

Shares of UVXY sold short at 19.48
Put for the April 21st expiration, 19.00 strike, sold short for 0.62
Call for the April 21st expiration, 19.50 strike, bought for 0.98

Soon after setting this up, I realized that I was taking on a risk of a $38 per contract loss and stood to profit only $12 per contract, at best.  Then it went against me, and then in my favor, and I'm not sure how soon or how many times.  I was too busy calculating exit strategies and the landscape changed several times in between checking in on it.

Late in the day I decided I would buy back the put at a loss.  I would have been able to do so for a gain, just minutes earlier, but as I watched and schemed it turned into a loss, and I did it anyway.  Why?  I decided to raise my risk so that I could raise my potential reward.  As it stood, my risk was limited to a total of $380, but removing the short puts from the strategy would change that risk to the total of the loss I might realize on the shares (just two cents per share) and the premium paid for the calls, which was 0.98 plus any loss taken on the closing of the short puts.  I closed the puts for 0.79, after having opened them for 0.62, booking a loss of 0.18 or $18 per contract.  My total maximum worst-case loss would now be 1.18 or $118 per contract.


Then this morning, I saw that I was fortunate enough not to be looking at potential losses; instead I caught a glimpse of some nice unbooked gains.  As seen in the chart, UVXY was well into the 18s.  I saw that I could close both my shares and my calls and take a profit of about $40 per contract, but being greedy, I calculated stops to set instead.  So I did the following:  Sold the calls which I had purchased for 0.98 to someone willing to pay 0.27, which increased my total loss (adding in the put loss from yesterday) to $89 per contract.  My goal now was to close my UVXY short shares at any price that would pay me back for that loss, or better.

Remember that I had shorted UVXY at 19.48, and it was now trading in the 18.20s.  The yellow line indicates a stop I set to buy to cover at 18.56.   This was intended to net me a $92 (per block of 100 shares) profit so I could wrap all this up and put it behind me in the learning books.


 Then, as often happens, one spike, and I mean ONE one-minute candle (see above) conspired to take out my stop and I lost the whole deal.  My UVXY short shares were now bought back at 18.58 (you should have heard the series of ring-a-dings as attempts were made to get me out as requested) and my profit on the short shares came in a 0.90 per share, or $90.00 per block of 100 shares.   So I ended up essentially flat on this venture, which is better than the way it could have ended.  That sure was a lot of fancy footwork to close out such a multi-faceted gem that was intended to run as long as three days and could have produced a range of outcomes, only to back out within one day and wipe the slate clean.