By Ernest Chan.
1) We can find distortions in the 2D implied volatility surface (implied volatility as z-axis, expiration months as x, and strike prices as y) which may mean revert to “smoothness”, hence presenting arbitrage opportunities. These distortions are present for both stock and stock index options.
2) Options are underpriced intraday and overpriced overnight: hence it is often a good idea to buy them at the market open and sell them at market close (except on some special days! See 4 below.). In fact, there are certain days of the week where this distortion is the most drastic and thus favorable to this strategy.
3) Certain cash instruments have unusually high kurtosis, but their corresponding option prices consistently underprice such tail risks. Thus structures such as strangles or backspreads can often be profitable without incurring any left tail risks.
4) If there is a long weekend before expiration day (e.g. Easter weekend), the time decay of the options value over 3 days is compressed into an intraday decline on the last trading day before the weekend.
Now, as quantitative traders, we have no need to take his word on any of these assertions. So, onward to backtesting!
(For those who may be stymied by the lack of affordable historical intraday options data, I recommend Nanex.net.)
===
There are still 2 slots available in my online Mean Reversion Strategiesworkshop in May. The workshop will be conducted live via Adobe Connect, and is limited to a total of 4 participants. Part of the workshop will focus on how to avoid getting hurt when a pair or a portfolio of instruments stop cointegrating.