Just jumped in for a moment.
I was looking for a post for which I thought I had a partial answer and realized I never read this one of yours. I follow your logic on deriving FV, etc. but at the end I wanted to also add this.
At the end, when you say that Instead what arbs do is buy a basket that REPRSENTS the SPX. One other thing that is usually done is the 'weighting'of the basket, which is affected by Relative Strength. For example, if the program was designed to buy the cash and GE, XON, IBM were the highest RS stocks more buys would be targeted at those stocks and not at low RS stocks.
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The post I was looking for had to do with how OEX (for example) options were priced and I thought this e-mail I received might go part of the way towards some sort of reply. It does not regard 'premium stripping', but rather 'premium adding', so to speak.
There are a number of factors that determine option bid ask spreads, however they alll tie into the ability of the floor trader to hedge.
First there are legal limits at every range of prices as set by exchange rules. In almost all instances these limits can default to the limit oof the underlying security. So if a stock or basket had a $3 b/a the option could have a $3 b/a.
B/A's are set by the trading crowd or specialist depending on the exchange. A limit order could change(improve )the b/a assuming it had no qualifiers that prohibited it being shown on the screen. For example an AON to buy 50 contracts could not be shown on the screen because , for example, a 10 lot to buy could not be filled by a 50 lot AON.
At almost all exchanges, for almost all options an autoquote system exists which prices the options and is set to a b/a default with some parameters.
For example 0 - 3 set at 1/8.....3+ - 5 set at 1/4, above 5 set to stock b/a or 3/8 whichever is greater.
The b/a is also for a specif size(which varies based on pit culture)but for no less than 10 contracts. Large orders can, and often will be, done outside of the b/a.
There are different rules about customer priority. At CBOE we have a customer orderbook which has priority over all trades except spreads(which is why trading at a spread as a spread is often superior(actually abouut 2/3 of the time it is better). So a book limit could be touched by a spread and the book limit order not trade.
You have a booked limit to by at 2 1/2. A print occurs at 2 1/2 but it is not you. WHY? It was part of spread and to facilitatre the spread one side was done at 2 1/2...since the spread is noot sensitive to the "absolute" value of an option it can touch the bbok on one side.
Thhere is often a pit market better than the screen. Remember if the pit committment is say 100 contracts they might display a quote which represents their committment....a better quote might exist for 5's and 10's. This is the kind of activity that has evloved in instruments like SPX and DJX where the screen quotes are for a size of greater than 10 contracts.
In declared fast markets....BE VERY CAREFUL.....as most ATM and ITM will default to legal maximums.
Be especially careful of put b/a when markets are down and it becomes difficullt or impossible to short "listed" stocks. No upticks essentially means no ability to hedge so...mark the puts up enough to try to bring in natural sellers. If I can't short stock..I can't build puts so I only want to sell themm if you make me...and the only way to make me is to pay up. This by the way is one of the primary reasons for vol skew. Not the only reason.
I think I got to alll your points or at least I hope so because a finger I use for typing just fell off.
Sorry for the length of the post....except for the last line it seemed I should not cut it up. |