As I have documented many times on this silly little blog, I have a position in MSTR—Miscrostrategy Inc. It’s a Bitcoin investment on steroids, which is great when Bitcoin goes up, but not great when it goes down. I consider MSTR to be a medium term hold, meaning I have no plans to sell it anytime soon.
But, being the greedy guy that I am, I wanted more, so I’ve done many covered-writes against the stock. This is an excellent strategy during sideways periods because I pocket the premium. When Microstrategy is going up, it’s a disaster.
This week was not a disaster, but it was close.
All was going according to plan. MSTR was moving sideways, and it appeared that my calls would expire worthless, and I would pocket the premium.
Then, on Thursday, MicroStrategy announced a 10 for 1 stock split. That caused the stock price to jump from $1,300 to $1,400, on the assumption that more retail investors could buy the stock, and buy more options on the stock.
Great.
I sold my calls at the $1,400 strike price.
By 2:45 pm on Friday, 75 minutes before options expiration, MSTR hit $1,435, so I was faced with a loss of $35 on the calls. Fortunately, I covered at $32, so I was only looking at a loss of $3, but still, if I had closed out the position two days earlier, my profit would have been closer to $30, so I wasn’t looking good.
As look would have it, the stock faded into the close, and by 3:30 pm, MSTR was back to $1,404, and I was feeling much better.
But what should I do? By the options back for $4, or wait until the close to see if the collapse continued and the options would expire worthless?
Tough call.
But here’s the amazing thing: With 30 minutes to go until expiration and with the options $4 in the money, they were trading at $9! Who would pay a premium of $5 for 30 minutes?
At 3:37 pm, MSTR dipped to $1,399, but the options were trading at $5.70! That’s over a 6-dollar time premium for an option that expires in 23 minutes. Crazy.
At 3:47 pm, I had had enough, so I closed out the position by “buying to close” at $4.70 while MSTR was trading at $1,398.
The result: since covering on July 3, the share price increased from $1,309 to $1,398, and I sold the options for $31.58 and bought them back for $4.70 for a profit on the options of $26.88.
I’m fine with that.
However, if I had done nothing, the options would have expired worthless, because MSTR closed for the week at $1,397.
Isn’t it funny how the Big Boyz know where the options are and rig the system to get the close price so that many holders are out of the money?
Probably just a coincidence.
Oh well, we can live to fight another day.
Thanks for reading. More next week.
All normal humans are the same
July 5, 2024All normal humans are the same. We act in our own self-interest. Unless you have a physical or mental irregularity, if your hand inadvertently touches a hot surface, your hand will instantly pull away, with no conscious input required. We act in our own self-interest. If you are walking in the woods, in the middle […]