I recently built this cockpit view to see what’s going on in markets. I’ll be iterating on it as well as creating a page to incorporate my portfolio so I can do some high level bucketing by asset class, vol weights, and portfolio correlation. It won’t take much to get it to a suitable template for the personal account.
I’ll probably add proxy benchmarks to mimic private fund holdings that hold public securities. However, there won’t be accounting for angel investments. I hold them at cost on the spreadsheet and at 0 in my brain regardless of their “valuation”. If anything hits, I figure my kids will thank me one day. If not, and I trained them well, they’ll drag me over the foregone beta return. They own a lookback option on our sense of guilt. That goes beyond finances I’m sure.
We’ll talk about the cockpit view briefly before using it to describe Q3.
1) Columns Worth Clarifying
I bought oil and sold stocks back on 9/11/24 when it seemed like a nice rebalance entry. I was wrong on the oil vol sale, but right on direction…I synthetically sold puts in oil vs selling railroad shares (CP)…see commodity kamikaze
While I got the USO vol trade wrong, the GLD short vol idea carried well.
I threw this on Twitter yesterday:
The discomfort of short vol (this might have something to do with why it often pays):
On 8/16, I wrote about the GLD Nov 232 ATM call looking fat over 17% IV
The call was ~$9.40
Shorts have made nearly $2 on delta-hedged basis
But notice what’s uncomfortable…
GLD is up nearly 5% since then (as of 9/30)
Strike vol did come in hard and stay subdued for about a month after I wrote the post.
It’s recovered recently but the strike vega is much smaller with over a month elapsing & the call being .81d (not ATM anymore)
A 1-minute video:
Lots of fields:
There’s even a stockhistory() function.
I hope the cockpit view inspires your own ideas. We will be bringing a very similar version to moontower.ai
If you use options already, definitely check it out. It’s option trader goggles. Vol traders already understand the lens but if you are a directional or fundamental trader who is even curious about options the Primer and Mission Plan docs offer surgical ways to expressing your views. And if the cockpit is any indication, option metrics alone are useful for thinking about risk and opportunity even if you don’t trade options.
That’s the premise of Option Analytics For All.
Some headings from that post:
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