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sle的重要看法,不要賣太價外而忽略了大變動時vol對vega的交互影響:
My pleasure. Most of the blowups that I can recall started as short wing carry positions, i.e. strike is far OTM and "the market would not get there". I've seen these both as expressing a view or a systematic strategy (e.g. LJM "safe" fund or these guys for that matter) or as a way to cheapen the position that expressed the core view (e.g. Citadel Eurodollar trade right before the GFC). It's not exactly selling crash, which is extreme short-dated moves, but it's in the same neck of the woods.
They are short convexity that can not be hedged without other convex instruments and then the underlying moves against them. If you are simply short gamma, you have a fairly defined range and you can, for better or for worse, rebalance your delta to limit your variance. On the other hand, if you are short wings, a lot of things go against you at the same time - you have very little gamma (or delta, for that matter) at the inception of the trade but you are short tons of dGamma/dSpot, you are short a fair bit of dVega/dSpot and, finally, you are short dVega/dVol. By the time that position becomes simply a short gamma position, it's a bit too late. "If the left one does not get you, then the right one will".
It's hard to define explicitly what differentiates a "short wing" from "short OTM gamma". Some people draw a hard delta boundary (e.g. 10 delta), but my personal metric is the relationship between Vega and delta - e.g. if you are short an OTM option where most of your daily PnL fluctuation can not be attributed to delta, thats a warning sign for me.
* Another useful metric is theta - if you are collecting and yet the book greeks (delta/gamma) look reasonable, there is something to worry about. |
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