1) How do I diversify
against this strategy?
Ha! That's funny. Diversifying against a massive leveraged portfolio. Oh,
you're actually serious.
This is actually a very complex question. Diversification
is dependent upon both portfolio size and relative
allocations, and on each investment's individual
volatility. A small, highly volatile investment
may make more of a contribution to portfolio
returns than a large diversified investment.
The indexes have relatively low volatility,
and the volatility is even lower when two or
three are combined. On the other hand, a $250,000
portfolio will have daily price swings of +/-$1,500
or so. Your other investments may have similar
price volatility, or may be very stable.
Many people use the Index Roll as a complementary investment, providing
diversification against their other active investments.
But even if the Index Roll dominates your investment portfolio, you can
still be diversified within the Index Roll strategy by selecting a portfolio
that's diversified by industry, country, company size, and time by using
different index ETFs and purchasing them on a defined schedule.
2) I'm interested in income. Would
this help me?
Using roll ups, this strategy can generate income.
However the income is unpredictable.
For example if you hold options on IWN for ten years, its very likely you
will get a lot of income sometime within that ten years.
If that sounds unclear, and you're wondering
how to pay your rent during that time, well,
that's the problem. Investment returns are unpredictable,
so we don't know exactly how long it will be
before you can comfortably do a roll-up.
We can do some calculations based upon average
returns. Let's say that you buy ETFs with a strike
price of 80% of market price, and hold them until
the market price rises to 150% of strike price,
or 120% of the original market.
Then, if your ETFs rise at 10% a year, you will
be able to roll up your options in about two
years and get 16% of the original market price
back. If you do the math, that's a huge amount
of income.
But on the other hand if the market falls, it
might be years before you're in a position to
do a rollup. So Index Roll can generate lots
of income, but the timing is very unpredictable
and you shouldn't depend upon it in the short-term.
3) Should I risk losses in a retirement
account?
There's an argument that only low risk assets
should go in a retirement account, because 1)
you can't write off losses in a retirement account,
and 2) if you make a mistake in a retirement
account, the opportunity to contribute is gone
forever.
And because of that reasoning, and because options
are more risky than stocks, it follows that options
aren't suitable for a retirement account.
But we don't buy the argument. Are we investing
for short-term losses? No, we're investing for
long-term gains, and huge gains in a retirement
account are exactly what we need to fund a stable
retirement.
Your retirement account is the ideal place to
put long-term investments, and the Index Roll
strategy is a long-term investment strategy.
To avoid that opportunity just because of some
short-term volatility doesn't make sense to us.
4) Can I implement this strategy
using Index Options?
We haven't done it, but yes, it should work.
LEAPs aren't available for all indices, so your
index choices may be limited. For example, we
haven't seen an index with international exposure.
If you do some research on this or give it a
try, please tell us how it goes. Our understanding
is that the pricing is almost identical.
5) Could I sell monthly calls on
my LEAPs to make even more money?
Well, you could but you wouldn't want to in
the long run. We know it looks promising, but
its a mirage. Here's the brief explanation, and
feel free to ask further questions if you want
more information or are still not convinced.
When you sell a covered call, most months you
think you're better off. The premium makes your
losses smaller and gives you about the same level
of gains.
But its the extremes that get you. When the
market takes a major hit, say a 10% drop, it
takes forever to work your way back to your previous
position when your future returns are capped.
And when the market climbs a lot, you either
miss out, or you're stuck having to buy your
appreciation back. This may not happen that often,
but if you throw out the one month in each year
with the highest return, you're cutting your
average market returns significantly.
Then there's all of the extra transactions,
the bid/ask spread, the time spent, etc. You're
going to make your online broker a lot richer.
Now there is one thing you could do - when you
buy your LEAP, sell a single call at the same
strike price but with a shorter expiry. It doesn't
have a big impact in the long run, but it can
save you a little money if the market stays flat
or goes down in the short term. But once this
short call expires, just let it go.
6) Can I use shorter calls? Two
years seems like a long time to hold a call.
Well, you could buy one year calls, hold them
for six months, sell them, and buy another year
at the same strike. But your costs will be higher
and all your gains will be short-term.
But are you thinking about a cash strategy?
There are some strategies where you buy or sell
repeated calls on the Index. These are strategies
where you bet $1000 every month to get $2000,
with an expected value of $1100, or something
like that.
The problem with these strategies are that the cash inflows and outflows
are wildly unpredictable in the short term, so even though your spreadsheet
says you make 25% a year, you can find yourself halfway through the year
and down -200% even though the markets only fallen 15%.
Holding a leveraged index position may sound
risky, but if you don't plan on selling it for
years, just rolling it over, your cash outflows
are predictable in the short term, and your inflows
are predictable in the long-term, and that's
exactly the way you want it.
7) Can I use puts or spreads instead
of calls?
You could. There are lots of ways to be long
the index - you can sell puts, buy calls, buy
bull call spreads or sell bull put spreads, whatever.
Still, long calls are simple to use, economical,
and don't have high transaction costs. They capture
all of the upside appreciation and limit your
downsides. They don't have margin calls and you're
never in a situation where you can get an early
exercise.
We recommend you stick to owning LEAP calls.
If you want more leverage and capital efficiency,
you can always select higher strike prices. Just
monitor your roll forward costs very carefully.

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