Fx options = better risk/reward

Trading the Forex market [U]in any manner[/U] has many advantages over other markets (such as equities). It is highly liquid, very large, almost impossible to manipulate, its volume driven mainly by commercial trade need (not speculation), and the relevant data is transparent and easily available (except trade volume). However, there are some real pitfalls. If we�re wrong directionally and the market finds us, losses can be severe, even at lower leverages. A modicum of volatility is good for trading, as movement is what sustains a market. However, during the last year volatilities have been enormous. With a 24/5 market, you can�t always be there to monitor positions. The use of stops can prevent a blown account, but they also lock in losses, sometimes needlessly.

trading Forex with options preserves much of the advantages of trading Forex, and eliminates some of the downsides:
There is no leverage in the purchase of options. Sleep at night
There is no drawdown beyond the premium. Sleep at night
There is less time involved (no need to monitor positions often)
Trading with options avoids the paying of interest on leveraged positions- of special interest to Muslim investors following Sharia law, who cannot pay interest (or even receive it on the Carry).

The upside is large and can return multiples of the premium. The two disadvantages to options are 1) unlike a trade in the underlying asset, options are time-limited and 2) the spot must move enough to cover the premium and then an additional amount for a profit to be made. A trade in the underlying spot profits as soon as it moves enough to cover the broker spread. We will see that both of these factors can be accounted for and calculated so as to maximize the probability of returns.

see attached paper for a detailed discussion on using options in FX

Me personally, I would love to trade FX options because I think options are the best trading instruments around, but it seems there isn’t a very liquid market in them yet, except for maybe FX futures options.

I’ve trade the vanilla options with saxobank and the spreads were too huge to overcome. I’m gonna assume because liquidity is not there yet to tighten up the spreads. I also trade fx options on the PHLX and ISE and I find the same thing as well. Getting in and out of trades definitely isn’t as easy as in spot market.

Any suggestions around these hurdles or do you think it will get any better soon?

hey FX dude
I dont trade on a short term, but rather a long term (many months), looking for larger trends, say 500-1000+ pips. therefore, the bid-ask spreads, 20-30 pips, are not at all important to me. having said that, if you’re trying to execute hedges (eg call backspreads, butterflies etc), they will definately get in the way.

more importantly is their pricing of volatility. my own feeling is that Saxo implied volatility is often less than my calculation using GARCH, and so I am not at all averse to spending their premiums for simple positional plays.

thanks for the comments! (did you read the attached paper?)

Where is the attached paper?

I do execute hedges and spreads on index equity options… and I love it!

But yeah, the spreads in fx options are too huge for that. Maybe options will catch on sometime in retail fx industry for liquidity to grow. We’ll see i guess.

Would anyone like to see a school lesson on options?

Make it an appendix. :slight_smile: