Advanced Selling Masterclass
Advanced Ratio Tactics: Variable & Delta Neutrality
Moving beyond the 2:1 ratio. We learn how to engineer the "Perfect Hedge" using Delta Neutrality and how to flatten the profit curve with Variable Ratios.
The Variable Ratio ("Trapezoidal Hedge")
Sometimes, a single strike price doesn't give you the coverage you need. Enter the Variable Ratio Write.
Instead of selling 2 Calls at the SAME strike (e.g., 2x $50), you sell 1 ITM Call and 1 OTM Call (e.g., 1x $45 and 1x $55).
Result: This flattens the "Peak" of the tent into a "Plateau." You make the same maximum profit anywhere between the two strikes.
Math: Max Profit = Total Premiums + Lower Strike - Stock Price.
Delta Neutrality: The Math Approach
Is 2:1 always the right ratio? No. If the calls have a low Delta (e.g., 0.20), selling 2 of them against 100 shares leaves you net long. If they have a high Delta (e.g., 0.80), you are net short.
To be perfectly neutral, use the Neutral Ratio Formula:
Neutral Ratio = 1.0 / Call Delta
Example: If Call Delta is 0.60, Ratio = 1.0/0.60 = 1.66. This means for every 300 shares, you sell 5 calls (300 shares vs 500 delta = net zero).
Call Delta
0.60
Neutral Ratio
5:3
Net Delta
0
ESP: Equivalent Stock Position
When you have a messy position (Long Stock, Short ITM Calls, Short OTM Calls), how do you know your risk?
Calculate the ESP (Equivalent Stock Position).
ESP = (Option Quantity x Delta x 100) + Stock Shares
Example: Long 300 Shares. Short 5 Calls (Delta 0.80).
ESP = (-5 x 0.80 x 100) + 300 = -400 + 300 = -100 Shares.
Result: You are Net Short 100 shares. If the market rises, you lose money. To neutralize, buy 100 shares.
Key takeaways
- Variable Ratios (ITM + OTM) create a profit plateau instead of a peak.
- Use Delta to calculate the perfect Neutral Ratio (e.g., 5:3).
- ESP (Equivalent Stock Position) simplifies complex risk into a single number.
Series
Advanced Selling Masterclass
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