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Draw a picture of the payoff: /¯.sfad wrote:With short puts now:
I understand that delta of short puts is positive (short put, stock ↑, value of option ↑).
But when stock price rises (which is benefit to a short put), why does the delta of a short put decrease in the range of 1 to 0? I thought since it is a benefit, delta increases?
The value of a short put is negative.sfad wrote:Okay i understand the diagram and slope.
But conceptually, when stock price rises (which is a benefit to a short put), why does the delta decrease? I thought that since it is a benefit, the delta would increase, so the short put option is more valuable given the stock price rise?
Long gamma = Long Vol <- Is this correct?arigolden wrote:
Just a practical way of approaching this (regardless of whether its a call or put):
BUYING an option = Long Gamma and Long Vol (you want to see volatility and fluctuations in the underlying increase)
SELLING an option = Short Gamma and Short Vol (if you sold an option, the last thing you want is volatlity or fluctuations in the underlying - the more it moves, the higher the chances that it might be called/put. You want a more stable underlying)
puts move from -1 to 0. So less negative. Also, when stock goes up, value of puts go down…meaning out of money, meaning towards zero, meaning less negative, meaning good for short position - the guy who sells puts.sfad wrote:
s2000 thank you for your persistence on this, but i am still confused with the short put.
I get that delta of short puts is positive (stock ↑, value of option ↑). When stock price rises, the delta number of short puts will become less negative, but how is a move from +1 to 0 less negative?
I believe there is no causal relationship between gamma and vol measures, the input to the absolute gamma is the underlying px relative to strike (implies the senstivity of the option’s delta to change in underlying px) while the input to vega is the vol of the underlying, however it is correct to say that if you are short an option you are short both vega and gamma (and vice versa).June06 wrote:
Long gamma = Long Vol <- Is this correct?