âHow To Turn a Boring Options Strategy Into An Exciting Explosion of Profitsâ
âŚItâs the bread and butter trade of most floor traders on the CBOE and heresâs their secretâŚ
Dear Trader,
âButterfly spreads are not a high probability tradeâ I told him.
Even though he spent 20 years as a floor trader on the CBOE, I thought I knew better than he did.
Thatâs how stupid I can be sometimes! I thought I knew all about butterflyâs!
Thatâs when my mentor told me, ââŚbutterfly spreads were the bread and butter trade of most of the floor traders I knew on the CBOEâŚâ
I didnât say it, but was thinking, âWhat? How?â
I studied butterfly spreads extensively and didnât like them for several reasons:
But he said almost every floor trader never put them on as a âdebitâ spread⌠they always got them as a credit spread.
I said, âWell they are floor traders, so thatâs easyâ.
He said, âFloor traders have to place their trades through the market maker for that stock and the last thing a floor trader wants to do is give another floor trader an edge, so they would never put on a butterfly for them at a creditâ.
âSo how did they do them for a credit?â
âThatâs the secret,â he said â and he laughed as he said it, teasing me for the answer!
I was a bit agitated at his elusiveness, but knew he would finally give me the âsecretâ so I just stayed silent until he spilled it.
âOkâ, he said, âŚâhereâs the deal. They donât enter them as butterfly spreadsâ
He went on to tell me how, actually, you can sometimes get away with sending an order in on a butterfly spread with a credit and get it filled, but itâs rare and only when volatility is high.
If volatility is at normal levels, typically you have to get âcreativeâ with the order.
So as I listened to how it was possible to create butterfly with a credit â using both methods â it made total sense to me. I got it and realized that the simplicity of it guaranteed it would be an effective way to get a butterfly at a credit almost every time â no matter what the volatility level was.
He said, âOnce you get a traditional equal wing butterfly at a credit, it was hard to lose money. As a floor trader, we did not pay commissions so it made a lot of sense to do them â as many times as possible for a credit because it cost us nothing, and occasionally weâd have a big win when they settled at our short strikes.â
It was not a new idea to me actually, but I guess it was over my head, or I just didnât âget itâ. I first learned of the strategy he was talking about while reading Charles Cottleâs book, âOptions Trading: The Hidden Realityâ several years ago. To be honest, itâs pretty technical reading and I thought difficult to translate it into a viable strategy for anyone other than a floor trader. I didnât see the âbigger pictureâ, but when he started talking about it, all the missing pieces in Cottleâs book fell into place, and I could finally understand how retail traders like us could use it successfully.
The whole conversation started because I was wondering if there was a way to generate options income without adjustments, extensive monitoring, and maintenance.
As he continued to discuss it, and remembering what I read in Cottleâs book, the thought occurred to me that commissions are extremely low at some brokers and this could be a viable strategy for the retail trader now.
He agreed, and thought it could be viable, IF they followed the floor traderâs strategy of always getting them at a zero debit or, better yet, at a credit so that trader would only be out the commission if they expired outside the âshort strike sweet spotâ.
And then he revealed the biggest secret of making these work. He alluded to it when he said to do them âas many times as possibleâ but I didnât really âget itâ the first time I heard him say it.
Itâs like the first time you see a movie then watch it again â the next time you watch it youâll notice something you missed the first time.
So as he demonstrated the idea behind âas many times a possible as long as you can get them at a creditâ along with the images in Cottleâs book â the light bulb finally lit up in my tired, old, traderâs brain.
And it was exciting. My mind was blown so I named this strategy âButterfly Bombsâ or b-bombs. Cottle calls them âpregnant butterflyâs, but I like âb-bombsâ better ?
After he explained the method a bit more I thought about all the benefits of this floor traderâs method of making butterflyâs work for us including:
Now there was an additional strategy he mentioned called a âbroken wingâ butterfly which are the ones Iâve been using for the past 6 months (before I started with âb-bombsâ) and in this course I talk about them first because they are still relatively a good âset and forgetâ trade. All the above benefits apply to broken wing butterflyâs too, except that the margin requirements are higher, it is a âdirectionalâ strategy and some basic technical analysis does increase the probability of success.
But I included it because it does provide yet another way to generate option income, with relatively low risk, on a consistent basis.
I call the two strategies together, âBetter ButterflyâsââŚ
The Better Butterflyâs course includes 10 videos in all and includes both âbroken-wingâ and âb-bombâ butterflyâs:
These are the best way, in my opinion, to trade for income today in the options market.
Best wishes and much success,
Dave Vallieres
Founder, Tradingology
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