How Overzealous Option Traders Are Making 3X Leveraged ETFs Look Like Saviors

Warning: A key part of the options market you may be relying on is no longer working. Iโ€™m talking about the fact that implied volatility is spiking selectively, sending call option premiums into the stratosphere. Everyone is scrambling to buy short-dated upside exposure, paying massive premiums for the privilege. More News from Barchart There are…


How Overzealous Option Traders Are Making 3X Leveraged ETFs Look Like Saviors

Warning: A key part of the options market you may be relying on is no longer working.

Iโ€™m talking about the fact that implied volatility is spiking selectively, sending call option premiums into the stratosphere. Everyone is scrambling to buy short-dated upside exposure, paying massive premiums for the privilege.

More News from Barchart

There are plenty of cases, but Iโ€™ll use perhaps the most timely example. Thatโ€™s Micron (MU).

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

That price chart is the thing traders dream about. But when a stock vaults like that, if you own it, you want to hedge it. And if you donโ€™t own it, you want to. But you donโ€™t want to be the โ€œgreatest foolโ€ buying in at the potential peak.

The knee-jerk response has always been to pass on the stock we โ€œmissedโ€ and instead buy out-of-the-money call options on it. After all, when controlling 100 shares of MU now requires more than $90,000 invested and thus at risk, why not buy an out-of-the-money call option for a fraction of that price?

For perhaps a capital commitment and maximum loss of $5,000 or less, you might end up making more in dollars using call options. Thatโ€™s what I call โ€œgood leverage.โ€

READ MORE: I found a newย article from my colleague Rick Orford in Barchartโ€™s great library. It explains the basics of this approach.ย 

MUโ€™s rapid rise in price would typically cause call option prices to stay fairly low. Thatโ€™s because when a stock goes up, options math relates that to lower risk. The opposite case is in force too. This is why ETFs like the ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (VIXY) and the ProShares VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF (VIXM), which Iโ€™ve covered here, are valuable hedges against down markets. Higher volatility is not normally associated with higher prices.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

Thatโ€™s changing.

In the table above, Iโ€™ve highlighted where MU call options were in the aggregate about a month ago. And where they are now. Their implied volatility has gone UP not down. That means call options are much more expensive than usual. Which in turn means trying to โ€œget awayโ€ with the old traderโ€™s trick of using call options as a surrogate to get our โ€œfair shareโ€ of extended moves in hot stocks has been blunted. This is because many investors have caught on to this approach, and the surge in demand has popped the lid off call option valuations.

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