Modidor

  

Categories: Derivatives

See: Iron Condor.

It might sound like something our of a Tolkien novel, but “modidor” is not the name of a fictional realm in Middle Earth. It’s actually a combination of the word “modified” and the term “iron condor,” and it refers to a type of options spread where we can realize a profit as long as the stock price in question stays above or below (depending on whether our puts and calls are feeling bearish or bullish) a single specified breakeven price. (An iron condor will yield profits as long as the price stays between two strike prices.)

A modidor approach takes a little of the risk out of the equation, though we still have to have enough market savvy to predict the movement of a stock price relative to our chosen strike price.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a hedge ratio?6 Views

00:00

and finance Allah shmoop What is a hedge ratio Okay

00:07

people of future hedge fund managers it's the ratio or

00:11

per cent of the total that you're hedging total portfolio

00:15

that you're hedging or protecting in you know in a

00:17

bad market So let's go through the market numbers here

00:20

that we're goingto totally and completely make up But they're

00:23

reflective of reality anyway And most reality we're going to

00:26

start with the notion that our entire portfolio at the

00:28

moment is one security ticker S p y Which more

00:31

last represents the S and P 500 That ticker trade

00:34

Today it's about 300 bucks a unit We're running a

00:37

hedge fund a lucrative one and our investors expect us

00:40

to protect their investments in both good and bad markets

00:44

So the question How much are we willing to pay

00:46

Hey for that portfolio life insurance How far down are

00:50

we okay letting this $300 per unit index fund fall

00:55

before we hedge it or protected Well pricing matters right

00:59

So if we want to protect it for three months

01:01

such that even $1 below $300 that are hedges kicked

01:05

in Well it'll cost a fortune something like $20 a

01:09

share maybe more That's a huge premium to pay for

01:12

protection which if the index unit stays flat at $300

01:16

for the next three months and change or even goes

01:18

up well we've lost 20 divided by 300 there or

01:22

about 7% of our portfolios Value way expensive What if

01:27

we were okay with it falling to 2 80 but

01:30

then protecting it below 2 80 meaning the strike price

01:33

of our puts will be a 2 80 right Well

01:35

the pricing there is to buy those put options with

01:37

a strike of 2 80 which expire in three ish

01:40

months Not a cost Eight bucks a share Yes we're

01:43

making up the numbers It's still expensive but well maybe

01:46

that's digestible aid over three hundred's about two and 1/2

01:49

percent change It's that worth it well for you and

01:51

realize that that's 10% a year and edges out Maybe

01:55

maybe depends how nervous we are what our position is

01:58

on where the markets heading the next 90 Well if

02:00

we look at the 2 60 strikes well then they

02:02

only cost $2 a unit toe fully hedged 100% of

02:06

our portfolio then it's less than 1% Maybe we do

02:09

that right We're going bye puts the 2 60 strikes

02:12

of the market would have to go down well over

02:14

10% in the next 90 days to kick those in

02:17

And that would be a lot right So we're vastly

02:19

generalizing the numbers here in order to present clarity or

02:22

conceptual clarity for you people as it relates the notion

02:25

of a hedge ratio The bigger question revolves around that

02:25

100% figure that is Do we really need to hedge

02:32

Ah 100% of our portfolio What if we were okay

02:36

with well 20% of it being 100% exposed to the

02:40

market totally floating or that 20% of the portfolio is

02:44

ah 0% hedged If we're paying $20 a unit to

02:48

hedge a $300 strike prices well then only 80% gets

02:52

Ah may be a tad more digestible Or what if

02:55

we only cared about hedging 50% of the portfolio so

02:58

that half is floating and half his head Maybe the

03:01

bookie that we're going against is the S and P

03:03

500 itself And if it went down 20% we were

03:06

only down 10 Maybe our investors would heart us What

03:09

do you think Well there's a whole bunch of math

03:10

behind these numbers and obviously none of it exists in

03:12

a vacuum without logic behind it But it's this percent

03:15

of portfolio thing here that we care about in a

03:18

hedge ratio because that is the notion of a hedge

03:21

ratio How much of our investment universe do we want

03:24

to pay to protect And how much are we willing

03:27

to pay for that protection And it's always the right

03:30

answer Yeah cue the adult diaper company It depends right

03:35

Well on what Well on how nervous Nellie our investors

03:38

are like how much do we really care about the

03:40

volatility of our portfolio Like here's the S and P

03:43

500 a chart of it for the last century and

03:46

change And yes it went up a lot but naked

03:49

it was hugely volatile Do we really care if all

03:52

we looked at was the price here and then the

03:54

price here it went up a ton While protecting the

03:58

volatility was just a waste of money then like buying

04:01

a month of term life insurance is a waste in

04:03

a month when you don't die So if we don't

04:05

care about the volatility then maybe the hedge ratio oughta

04:09

be zero or nothing Like why would we buy a

04:11

hedge fund at all if we don't care Overtime hedging

04:14

is a bad bet in markets that generally go up

04:18

And over time the market is up Something like six

04:21

out of seven years Right So when you hedge things

04:24

you're betting things were going awry here So do you

04:27

really want to bet against that system and hedge portfolios

04:30

Bet against capitalism Maybe bet against America Yeah probably not

04:34

So the next question the next it depends Question Well

04:37

how much do the hedges cost That is if you

04:41

could buy $1,000,000 term life insurance policy for 10 bucks

04:44

a month And even if you had nobody on Earth

04:47

you really cared about leaving the money too But maybe

04:49

if you got whacked by the 2 30 mid 10

04:51

bus what then You'd want to leave a profess Auriol

04:54

chair to your all the mater with that 1,000,000 box

04:57

and then maybe you'd spend the 10 bucks a month

04:59

on while that term life insurance head right But if

05:02

it was a few grand a month well then maybe

05:04

you're not going to pay life insurance company All that

05:06

money maybe you'll just invested instead on your own So

05:09

hedge ratios kind of live in the land of it

05:12

depends whether you want them at all or what percentage

05:15

of your portfolio you want to protect And how much

05:18

that portfolio life insurance actually costs like the other depends

05:22

It's all about protecting yourself from unforeseen accidents not get

Up Next

Finance: What is a Derivative?
23 Views

A derivative of a security is a "something" which derives its value based on the performance of that security... either a put option or a call option.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)