Options for Risk-Free Portfolios: Profiting with Dividend Collar Strategies
By M. Thomsett
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Options for Risk-Free Portfolios - M. Thomsett
OPTIONS FOR RISK-FREE PORTFOLIOS
PROFITING WITH DIVIDEND COLLAR STRATEGIES
MICHAEL C. THOMSETT
OPTIONS FOR RISK-FREE PORTFOLIOS
Copyright © Michael C. Thomsett, 2013.
All rights reserved.
First published in 2013 by
PALGRAVE MACMILLAN®
in the United States—a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC,
175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
Where this book is distributed in the UK, Europe and the rest of the world, this is by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS.
Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world.
Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries.
ISBN: 978–1–137–28257–6
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Thomsett, Michael C.
Options for risk-free portfolios : profiting with dividend collar strategies / Michael C. Thomsett.
pages cm
ISBN 978–1–137–28257–6 (alk. paper)
1. Options (Finance) 2. Risk management. 3. Portfolio management. I. Title.
HG6024.A3T4756 2013
332.64′53—dc23 2012032632
A catalogue record of the book is available from the British Library.
Design by Newgen Imaging Systems (P) Ltd., Chennai, India.
First edition: March 2013
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Printed in the United States of America.
To the third-century BC philosopher Thales, the earliest known options trader.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Quest for High Return and Low Risk
1. The Dividend Portfolio, an Overview
2. Managing and Reducing Risk with Options
3. The Advantage of the Covered Call
4. Downside Protection, the Insurance Put
5. The Collar: Removing All of the Risk
6. Rolling the Stock Positions: Turning 4% into 12%
7. Examples of the Basic Strategy
8. Modification: The Installment Collar Approach
9. Expanding into the Ratio Write Dividend Collar
10. More Expansion, Creating the Variable Ratio Write Dividend Collar
11. Modifying the Strategy with Synthetic Stock Positions
Epilogue: The Great Value in Patience
Notes
Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
MANY THANKS TO ALL OF THE SUBSCRIBERS AND MEMBERS OF LinkedIn groups who replied to my numerous options posts with questions and clarifications about the dividend collar. To all of those options traders struggling with the complexity of devising strategies while managing market risks, I appreciate your diligence and persistence in requiring me to be absolutely clear in my answers. To my friends at the Chicago Board Options Exchange and The Options Institute, especially Marty Kearney and Jim Bittman, thank you for the years of enthusiastic support and friendship. Special thanks for calm guidance from my agent John Willig, and also to Laurie Harting, Lauren LoPinto, and Joel Breuklander at Palgrave for guiding me through the production process.
INTRODUCTION: THE QUEST FOR HIGH RETURN AND LOW RISK
The market doesn’t reward qualities that are not scarce.
Mark A. Johnson, The Random Walk and Beyond, 1988
OPTIONS TRADERS CONTINUALLY SEEK THE BEST OF BOTH worlds—high return and low risk. A majority of the strategies they follow are not going to produce this desired result, not only in the options world but also in any market. Risk and return are two sides of the same trading coin: The higher the risk, the higher the potential for high return.
An exception does exist, however. High return and low risk can be accomplished through a strategic approach to the options market called the dividend collar. As options are flexible, they offer the opportunity to beat the market when used to hedge long portfolio positions; to manage your portfolio; and to take advantage of timing rules to generate exceptional but safe returns. However, options income is not the key to the dividend collar strategy; and neither is capital gains from buying and selling the underlying security. The key is that these two—options and stock—are used to eliminate risk while accelerating dividend income.
Every options trader has read all about how to get rich with covered calls, iron condors, or short puts. The sure thing
straddle or spread sounds great on paper but falls apart if the market moves in the wrong direction. So why do options traders find themselves caught by surprise again and again? Why keep trying out new strategies or new combinations? For many, the cynical conclusion is that options just don’t deliver on the promise. However, a related problem is that in addition to seeking higher than average returns, some traders are just not willing to work at it or, upon setting rules for themselves, are not willing to follow those rules based on changing valuation of the underlying elements of stock or options. They want those fast millions
to come easily. First, they might have to settle for fast thousands,
which is more realistic. Second, nothing is all that easy.
This book presents a series of strategic ideas designed to identify opportunities to reduce risk while generating much better than average returns. Double-digit returns are not only possible but also inevitable if the discipline behind these strategies is followed faithfully. This is the key for all options traders: Discipline. Even a relatively safe strategy such as covered call writing works only if you stick with the program. This means, for example, that of the many possible outcomes, getting some positions exercised is one way the position may end up; and if properly constructed, that is acceptable as well. But how many have rolled out of the covered call to avoid exercise? Was it worthwhile for the small additional income but extended time in the position? Did you accept a loss on one call hoping for bigger future profits on another? Did you end self-sabotaging overlooking the initial simplicity of the position?
This is only one example. Speculators have the same problem. If they buy long calls or puts, when do they sell? If the value of the long option rises, do they hold on thinking profits will grow only next week and the week after? If the value falls, do they cut their losses or hold on hoping to get back to their original position? Time decay is going to eat away at profits even if their position is in the money (meaning the price of stock has moved above the call’s strike or below the put’s strike), so if they set a bail-out or profit-taking goal and then opt not to take it, their self-programming is off. It means they are programmed for losses and not for profits.
The strategies in this book are designed for traders who want to program themselves to create consistent, reliable, realistic profits. Developing these strategies demands research and analysis, but the rewards are worth the time invested. There is no such thing as a get-rich-quick
scheme in the options market. Of course, one can get rich if one makes the right moves at the right time, but that is not always practically possible. Options traders are prone to what if
thinking just like everyone else, but a rational trader thinks about the future and does not dwell on the past, especially if the past is littered with ill-timed entries and exits, unexpected losses, and missed opportunities.
It is prudent to learn from those mistakes and not be defined by them.
The concept underlying this series of strategies is that one can create a risk-free portfolio that yields double-digit returns. This concept goes against virtually every understanding of markets, cycles, and the nature of risk. However, it proposes an approach different from traditional equity investing or popular options strategies. In the traditional stock market approach, those companies that are exceptionally well managed (value investments) or that offer exceptional potential for growth are picked. Then begins a buy-and-hold approach until the fundamentals change. In this approach, even a conservative investor uses options to generate cash (through covered call writing), play volatility (with iron condors and spreads, or even with short options), or protect paper profits (with insurance puts).
Traditional methods such as this have not enabled traders to beat the market consistently or safely. Covered call writing can go terribly wrong if the underlying value falls and continues to fall. Volatility trades can also be conservative. But it takes only one disastrous, badly timed trade to wipe out profits on dozens of well-timed trades; insurance protects only a portion of the paper profits (intrinsic value, minus the cost of the put), and it is a limited and defensive play only.
This book rejects these traditional methods. The investment strategy of picking exceptional stocks has failed; remember, there was a day when General Motors, Eastman Kodak, and Enron were all considered exceptional.
History has convincingly shown that investors are humans with flaws and that markets contain risks, often very high risks. On the options side, conservative trading is coming to be recognized as a more sensible approach than hedge strategies or the occasional speculative play.
The strategies proposed here are conservative
in the sense that they enable one to set up positions to generate income on short-term open positions. These positions are not based on smart stock selection or even on conservative options strategies by themselves. Instead, the risk-free portfolio
uses the underlying stock to open a low-cost or no-cost option position designed specifically to generate a desirable end result (high return, low risk)—not from either stock or option profits but from dividends. The short-term open positions are designed to identify attractive dividend yields—monthly instead of quarterly. As a result, three stocks each yielding 4% per year are opened only long enough to earn a quarterly dividend. Since dividends are earned on a monthly basis, this results in an overall annual dividend yield of 12%.
The first five chapters methodically explore the features and risks of each component of the dividend collar strategy: dividends (Chapter 1), options (Chapter 2), the covered call (Chapter 3), the insurance put (Chapter 4), and the collar (Chapter 5). The purpose of devoting time to a study of the risks underlying each component is to demonstrate two seemingly contradictory observations. First, all components of the strategy contain risks, which are, at times, quite severe or invisible. Second, when these same components are combined to create a risk-free portfolio, all market risks are eliminated. Most perceptions of risk are specific to a strategy or to a market. However, the proper construction of the dividend collar works to eliminate these common market risks. Amazingly, proper application of the strategy eliminates dividend, option, and stock risks altogether, while yielding double-digit annualized returns. This is a bold claim and that is why the case is built methodically and cautiously by first examining the attributes of the components, and then providing clear examples showing how these risks are managed and eliminated.
Once the basic strategy is mastered, it can be expanded further using the installment method, ratio writes and variable ratio writes, and synthetic stock positions. Though these expansions present greater levels of risk, some traders will find them attractive. As with all market strategies, every trader needs to balance the desire for return with acceptance of risk to some degree.
This approach is the starting point for using stocks and options to generate exceptional returns and at the same time to manage market risk.
C H A P T E R 1
THE DIVIDEND PORTFOLIO, AN OVERVIEW
The easiest job I have ever tackled in this world is that of making money. It is, in fact, almost as easy as losing it. Almost, but not quite.
H. L. Mencken, in Baltimore Evening Sun, June 12, 1922
DIVIDENDS ARE PERCEIVED IN MANY WAYS, SOME VERY INACCURATELY.
Traders who want to be in and out of positions short term, tend to ignore or undervalue dividends altogether. Because the dollar amount is quite small compared to a stock transaction, dividends often are viewed as nuisance factors to short-term traders. On the far end of the spectrum, value investors might ultimately pick one value investment over other choices based mainly on the dividend yield of the moment.
The point is, traders and investors cannot just buy stocks yielding higher than average dividends and expect to outperform the market. Dividend risk is one form of risk that is easily ignored or misunderstood. So while dividend yield can represent a major portion of overall yield, it has to be balanced against market risk. The dividend collar developed throughout this book is based on generating income from dividend yield, but the most crucial component of that strategy is protecting against the inherent risks that can accompany high-dividend stocks, at times to a greater extent than market risk in the overall equity market.
DIVIDEND YIELD AS PART OF OPTION RETURNS
In considering how dividends work along with long stock and long or short options positions, they cannot be ignored. Even in a more or less vanilla strategy such as the covered call, dividend yield might represent a major portion of the overall annualized return. Consider these important qualifying points:
1. If the covered call is open only a few days, but that period includes the ex-dividend date, the covered call writer’s annualized yield is substantially higher due to the dividend yield than it would be if the strategy were round-tripped one week earlier or later.
2. In selecting two otherwise identically attractive underlying stocks to be used for a covered call strategy, the higher-yielding dividend may serve as a deciding factor.
3. Long-term potential growth in earnings per share as well as a potential underlying issue for options strategies might be affected by the historical and future dividend record. Those companies paying higher dividends every year for 10 years or more (so-called dividend achievers
) tend to outperform the markets over time and to be less volatile both technically (predictability of price breadth and range) and fundamentally (in terms of predictability of revenue and earnings trends).
These are significant examples of how dividend yield is related to the selection of underlying issues as well as options strategies. The covered call cannot be viewed in isolation from the dividend yield. In fact, calculating returns from covered call writing is complex, but may include dividend yield in addition to capital gains or losses on the underlying and premium income from selling the call. This method, at times called total return,
attempts to validate comparisons of net return among covered calls on a variety of stocks. These may include stocks yielding various dividend yields or offering no dividend at all. Because dividend yield changes the return (both basic and annualized), it makes sense to include the yield in the analysis of option-based return.
With this in mind, the higher the dividend yield, the better the overall return will be as well. Does this mean that selection of a covered call candidate should be limited to only those stocks yielding better-than-average dividends? No. In fact, in comparing only the covered call strategy (without considering any other hedging that might be included) the appropriate underlying stock should be selected based on sound fundamental analysis, and not on the basis of (1) richer-than-average option premium or (2) higher-than-average dividends.
Remembering that attractive yields often accrue because a company’s share price has plummeted, selecting covered call candidates based solely on dividend yield is quite dangerous. Share price might have fallen due to any number of causes, including the impending demise of the company and anticipation of a further price decline in the stock. In this case, a 7% yield on a stock yielding only 1.2% a few months earlier is not likely to be a sound candidate for covered call writing.
Assuming, however, that you have narrowed down selection for covered call writing to three different companies, and also assuming that all three share the same or similar fundamental attributes, how do you know which to purchase for a covered call strategy? While you can apply a number of sensible fundamental (or technical) criteria to pick one of the three, dividend yield may certainly act as one deciding factor.
This decision is not merely a matter of opting for the highest dividend yield. Depending on your analytical standards and on the ratios and trends you follow, you are likely to prefer one company over others without consideration of the dividend level. However, as a starting point for describing any options strategy, it makes sense to analyze the components that are included; how those components affect value; and what levels of risk are caused or mitigated as a result. Dividend yield is one of those components, and traders have struggled for years to determine the role of dividends and their effect on option valuation.
THE DIVIDEND EFFECT ON OPTION VALUES
Few will doubt that dividend yield has a direct effect on both stock and option value. A higher dividend makes a company’s stock more desirable than that of a company whose dividend is lower. The exception: If the yield has increased because the share price has declined, then a comparison of dividend yields is not valid. You also have to consider the reasons for changes in a stock’s price, both upside and downside, before equating one dividend yield to another.
Pricing models for options have provided a dismal indicator. The most popular among these, the Black-Scholes Pricing Model,¹ is a very flawed method for identifying fair value for options, because it contains several variables and excludes many important attributes that make the model inaccurate. These include
1. Dividends : Exclusion of any dividend yield, with the original Black-Scholes modeling assumption based on a zero dividend. Today, with so many securities declaring and paying dividends, the model is inaccurate to the extent that it compares and estimates option valuation between companies declaring dividends and those not declaring dividends.
2. Exercise : Assumption of European-style exercise, even though American stocks nearly always are exercised American-style. Thus, early exercise, which occurs frequently, is not built into the assumption.
3. Volatility : Black-Scholes provides a factor for volatility, but is flawed because it assumes that volatility remains unchanged all the way to expiration. Every options trader knows that extrinsic value (volatility) changes continually and, in fact, provides a key timing criterion for both entry and exit of most options strategies.
4. Interest : The formula assumes a theoretical risk-free
interest rate, which is a questionable assumption based on today’s debt security market. If this interest rate increases, call premium is expected to rise and put premium to decline. These effects are caused by the leverage of options in comparison to owning 100 shares of the underlying. However, in practice, when federal funds effective rates are as low as 1% or lower, the effect of risk-free interest (such as interest on US Treasury securities) is insignificant. As of 2012, the Fed effective rate was approaching zero, as shown in figure 1.1.
The complexity of how dividends and interest rates affect option valuation is not a small issue. Dividends are certainly a direct component of option and stock valuation, and interest affects the valuation of both calls and puts. It is noteworthy, however, to recognize that at the time the Black- Scholes model was devised, there was no standardized trading of puts in the US markets. In fact, even calls were available on the stock of only 16 companies.
Black-Scholes works as a pricing model in a comparative sense; however, it is so inaccurate that it provides little value in terms of changes in interest rates, and no value for dividend-paying stocks. The factor for volatility is based on assumption that the volatility level remains constant. The Black-Scholes formula is
Figure 1.1 Effective federal funds rate
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Federal Reserve Economic Date (FRED).
c = SN (d1) – Xe–rT (d2)
p = Xe–rT N (–d2) = SN (–d1)
where
c = call
p = put
S = Stock price
X = Strike price of the option
r = risk-free interest rate
T = time to expiration (in years)
σ = volatility of the relative price change of the underlying stock price
N(x) = the cumulative normal distribution function
The formula demonstrably excludes dividends, assumes unreliably about interest risk-free interest, sets volatility as a constant, and is based on European-style exercise. All of these assumptions make the model highly unreliable if applied in the real world
of trading. It may be beneficial in an academic setting where the interest is in trying to estimate a pricing level, given the assumptions (wrong or not). But in practice, Black-Scholes is a flawed model
Among those flaws is the assumption that a risk-free interest rate exists. That is unlikely today, when even the debts of the US government have been downgraded. This does not mean they are likely to default, but it does take away the historical risk-free assumption related to Treasury securities.
Interest rates affect option values directly and also serve as a guide for when or if to exercise an option early. If interest that can be earned on the proceeds received for selling a put at a higher level than is possible from holding until expiration, then early exercise is justified, at least in theory. This assumption is based on the additional assumption that if you close out an option position, you will immediately transfer capital to an instrument yielding a more favorable net return. This is the rationale often cited in support of Black-Scholes and similar pricing models. But in the modern-day environment of very low interest rates, this comparison is not valid. When it is possible to earn as much as 4–5% or more on stock ownership, the dividend yield is a far more important measure of return than interest rates for those companies could ever expect to be.
Dividends are likely to have much greater impact on option valuation than interest rates, notably when early exercise before the ex-dividend date is compared with exercise on or after the ex-dividend date. A general assumption about dividends is that the higher the cash dividend, the lower the call premium and the higher the put premium. While there is truth in this general rule of valuation, traders will still want to time their exercise decisions to be stockholders of record two days after the ex-dividend date—and this might lead to a decision to time entry and exit, even more than the relative value of the dividend yield or potential yield from closing stock and option positions and investing elsewhere.
These decisions are complicated by the additional considerations of whether the option is in or out of the money, the rate of time decay, and whether in-the-money (ITM) calls are vulnerable to exercise as the ex-dividend date approaches. The day before the ex-dividend date is the second most likely time for exercise, after the last trading day. Thus, proximity of the short call to current price is a crucial factor in option valuation, meaning that dividend yield is a key factor in the overall evaluation of options. It is not just proximity but time as well as actual yield that determines the option’s fair value.
PICKING DIVIDEND GROWTH STOCKS
The dividend growth stock
is highly favored by investors as a smart way to limit the search for portfolio components. A mistake often made by investors