Tag Archives: underlying

Hedging Disney Ahead Of Earnings

If guests have the nerve to die, they wait, like unwanted calories, until they’ve crossed the line and can do so safely off the property. – The Project On Disney, via Snopes Disney: Estimize Versus Value Investor’s Edge With Disney (NYSE: DIS ) reporting earnings after the close, the nearly 1,200 Disney analysts reporting to Estimize collectively predict the company will beat Wall Street’s consensus earnings estimate, as the graph below shows. Click to enlarge The Estimize consensus earnings estimate shown above, $1.46, is 6 cents ahead of the Wall Street consensus of $1.40. Since its analysts include private investors as well as those from independent research shops, buy-side firms, and sell-side firms, Estimize says its estimates tend to be more accurate than those from Wall Street analysts alone. On the bearish side is Seeking Alpha premium author J Mintzmyer, who runs the Seeking Alpha Marketplace service Value Investor’s Edge . In a Pro Research column ( Time To Short Disney ), Mintzmyer argued the stock was “horribly expensive” (in the comments, Mintzmyer clarifies that, while he still finds the stock overvalued, he is no longer short Disney and feels there are better short opportunities available now). Limiting Downside Risk For Disney Longs For Disney longs boosted by the bullish Estimize earnings prediction, but looking to hedge their downside risk over the next several months, we’ll look at a couple of ways of doing so below the refresher on hedging terms. Refresher On Hedging Terms Recall that puts (short for put options) are contracts that give an investor the right to sell a security for a specified price (the strike price) before a specified date (the expiration date). And calls (short for call options) are contracts that give an investor the right to buy a security for a specified price before a specified date. Optimal puts are the ones that will give you the level of protection you want at the lowest cost. A collar is a type of hedge in which you buy a put option for protection, and at the same time, sell a call option, which gives another investor the right to buy the security from you at a higher strike price by the same expiration date. The proceeds from selling the call option can offset at least part of the cost of buying the put option. An optimal collar is a collar that will give you the level of protection you want at the lowest cost while not capping your possible upside by the expiration date of the hedge by more than you specify. In a nutshell, with a collar, you may be able to reduce the cost of hedging in return for giving up some possible upside. Hedging Disney With Optimal Puts We’re going to use Portfolio Armor’s iOS app to find an optimal put and an optimal collar to hedge Disney, but you don’t need the app to do this. You can find optimal puts and collars yourself by using the process we outlined in this article if you’re willing to take the time and do the work. Whether you run the calculations yourself using the process we outlined or use the app, an additional piece of information you’ll need to supply (along with the number of shares you’re looking to hedge) when scanning for an optimal put is your “threshold”, which refers to the maximum decline you are willing to risk. This will vary depending on your risk tolerance. For the purpose of the examples below, we’ve used a threshold of 15%. If you are more risk-averse, you could use a smaller threshold. And if you are less risk-averse, you could use a larger one. All else equal, though, the higher the threshold, the cheaper it will be to hedge. Here are the optimal puts as of Monday’s close to hedge 200 shares of DIS against a greater-than-15% drop by late October. As you can see at the bottom of the screen capture above, the cost of this protection was $424, or 2.01% of position value. A few points about this hedge: To be conservative, the cost was based on the ask price of the put. In practice, you can often buy puts for less (at some price between the bid and ask). The 15% threshold includes this cost, i.e., in the worst-case scenario, your DIS position would be down 12.99%, not including the hedging cost. The threshold is based on the intrinsic value of the puts, so they may provide more protection than promised if the investor exits after the underlying security declines in the near term, when the puts may still have significant time value . Hedging Disney With An Optimal Collar When searching for an optimal collar, you’ll need one more number in addition to your threshold, your “cap,” which refers to the maximum upside you are willing to limit yourself to if the underlying security appreciates significantly. A logical starting point for the cap is your estimate of how the security will perform over the time period of the hedge. For example, if you’re hedging over a five-month period, and you think a security won’t appreciate more than 6% over that time frame, then it might make sense to use 6% as a cap. You don’t think the security is going to do better than that anyway, so you’re willing to sell someone else the right to call it away if it does better than that. We checked Portfolio Armor’s website to get an estimate of Disney’s potential return over the time frame of the hedge. Every trading day, the site runs two screens to avoid riskier investments on every hedgeable security in the U.S., and then ranks the ones that pass by their potential return. Disney didn’t pass the two screens, do the site didn’t calculate a potential return for it. So we looked at Wall Street’s price targets for the stock via Yahoo Finance (pictured below). We usually work with the median target, but in this case, it’s pretty low relative to the price of the stock. The $110.50 12-month price target represents about a 2% potential return between now and late October. On the other hand, the high target of $130 implies a return of about 9.6% over that time frame. By using a cap of 9%, we were able to eliminate the cost of the hedge in this case, so we used that. As of Monday’s close, this was the optimal collar to hedge 200 shares of DIS against a greater-than-15% drop by late October while not capping an investor’s upside at less than 9% by the end of that time period. As you can see in the first part of the optimal collar above, the cost of the put leg was $328, or 1.56% of position value. But if you look at the second part of the collar below, you’ll see the income generated by selling the call leg was a bit higher: $364, or 1.73% of position value. So, the net cost was negative, meaning an investor opening this collar would have collected an amount equal to $36, or -0.17% of position value. Two notes on this hedge: Similar to the situation with the optimal puts, to be conservative, the cost of the optimal collar was calculated using the ask price of the puts and the bid price of the calls. In practice, an investor can often buy puts for less and sell calls for more (again, at some price between the bid and the ask), so in reality, an investor would likely have collected more than $36 when opening this collar. As with the optimal puts above, this hedge may provide more protection than promised if the investor exits after the underlying security declines in the near future, due to time value (for an example of this, see this recent article on hedging Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), Hedging Apple ). However, if the underlying security spikes in the near future, time value can have the opposite effect, making it costly to exit the position early (for an example of this, see this article on hedging Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Facebook Rewards Cautious Investors Less ). Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

NGE: Invest In Nigeria’s Economic Revival

I am going to be a bit provocative and suggest that low oil prices is good for the world especially for the oil producers. When we look across the board at the largest global oil producers from Russia to Saudi Arabia, Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria and Brazil. It becomes clear that abundant oil or high oil prices is neither a blessing nor a benefit to the populace of these nations. These nations have been characterised by mismanagement and corrupt usage of funds and it is only now that we have had an extended season of low oil prices that we are now hearing and seeing serious structural, economic and constitutional reforms to wean these nations from almost complete reliance on oil revenues. Nigeria’s Reforms Out of all these nations, the one that excites me the most is Nigeria for a number of reasons. Firstly, nations like Saudi Arabia, Russia and the South Americans have a number of regional and internal political challenges that I believe will act as a drag on their ability to take decisive measures to reorient their economy. On the other hand, despite the matter of Boko Haram, Nigeria is as a whole politically stable and united under one democratically elected leader and administration. This is important because the oil markets are extremely volatile and wild moves there can wreak havoc on a nation’s balance sheet within a short time and the ability to make fast and decisive decisions are very critical to success in the endeavour to shield and wean a nation from dependence on oil or commodities revenues. This is what the Nigerian President Mr. Buhari has begun to do with the banning of large amounts of imports and restriction of the use of dollars in Nigeria thus making it increasingly expensive to do dollar transactions abroad. While these actions in the short term has caused significant disruptions and distortions like the extortionate prices that dollars is currently being sold on the black market, in the medium and long term, many will agree that these actions are the best for the economy. These actions will benefit the economy for three reasons, it will discourage the importation of substandard and dangerous products that are endangering the health and safety of the local population, it will help to stimulate local production which over time will be instrumental for the diversification of the local economy. Finally, it will help to counteract and counter balance the low prices of oil because as oil is traded in dollars, the fall in oil prices means less dollars to import products and also as the level of imports falls and local production increases, it softens the blow of low oil prices. All of these actions will have the combined effect of increasing the price of the naira itself, stabilize the CBN’s dollar reserve accounts, reduce inflation over time and also interest rates can then be reduced to manageable rates. Further, the net effects of this will also make local naira denominated bonds more attractive over the medium to long term. Secondly, they are very much focused on the matter of corruption and have taken several measures to streamline government accounts and increase transparency into how governmental funds are used. As far as I am aware, these are unprecedented steps even for developed economies. Despite this, the administration has come under significant pressure to change their focus back to Nigeria’s other economic challenges without understanding that by simply curtailing and cutting out corruption, the Nigerian economy will begin to experience more stability and success. Local Equity Markets Growth In light of all of the foregoing, in going back to my original thesis, what really excites me about all of these measures is the effect it will have on the local equity markets. Click to enlarge The chart above compares the Brent Crude Benchmark with the Nigerian Stock Market Index and it is self-evident that the correlation between the price of crude oil and the returns from the NSE were much linked. I am gradually coming around to the realization that oil prices will remain depressed for at least another year for various reasons. Firstly, it is clear that the depressed price of global crude oil is a supply problem and not a demand problem especially in the short and medium term. We know this because crude oil demand increased by 1.5 to 1.8 million barrels per day which is a 5 years high yet the price remained depressed. No one can really price or adequately measure when oil prices will increase or supply will reduce based on two factors, one factor is the ongoing saga of shale oil production in North America where it seems that industry consolidation is taking place. It will take about a year for the dust to settle and only then can we know with any certainty where short and medium term prices will be heading. The second major factor is Iran. They continue to be unpredictable and the market is correctly pricing in significant outputs of crude oil from Iran into the price per barrel. What this means is that things will get worse than better but this will be a positive for a nation like Nigeria particularly considering its current reform trajectory. It is my belief that over the next 12 months, we will see a gradual delinking in the chart above whereby oil prices continue to fall perhaps to 20-25 but at the same time, the NSE begins to gain ground as the constituent companies begin to do better under new economic conditions. This is true because if one looks at the listed companies of the NSE, it becomes clear that most of these companies are well placed to do well as this drive to increase local production, consumption and demand consolidates. The chart above is indicative of this divergence within the markets and we can see Dangote Cement, Flour Mills of Nigeria and Oando which is a leading indigenous oil company. As one can see that while they were all nearly at the same place in May 2015, Oando continues to weaken while the other two are gradually strengthening. These two represent construction, agriculture and food production, three sectors that we should see significant growth within the next 12 months as the national policies begin to take root. This final chart is the Global X Nigeria Index ETF NGE which invests at least 80% of its total assets in the securities of the Underlying Index which is designed to reflect broad based equity market performance in Nigeria. This is an ETF that has hit the bottom and has significant upside potential over the next 12 months. Here we can also see that the growth is tentative but increasingly established. This trend of divergence is one that we are seeing across the board whereby as commodities markets weaken, stock prices appreciate especially when the local economy is supported by government policies. To highlight this point, I have added two South American favorites of mine. In the first one, I compared the Brazilian stock market index to the crude oil prices and in the second, I compared the Argentinean stock market to the feeder cattle prices. Click to enlarge Click to enlarge In conclusion, it is my belief that rather than being a negative, low commodities prices can be a stimulant to help commodities dependent nations diversify their economy and thus creating profitable investment opportunities for investors in local production, manufacturing and services companies. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Covered Put Writing: Not What You Think

When you mention put writing to someone, their eyes widen, pupils dilate, their brain shuts down and tohu vavohu (Old Testament Hebrew term meaning “chaos” or “pandemonium” and still used in modern Hebrew language) ensues. This article will put right put writing, relieving anxiety, stress and possibly, believe it or not, even make you a fan of put writing. A couple of definitions and explanations are needed first. To begin with, put writing in this article is about “covered put writing”. To make things a little less complicated, the puts discussed in this article are European puts, the cash position earns no interest (i.e., interest rates are zero) and dividends, to the extent they matter, are ignored (i.e., assumed to be zero) Definition 1 : A covered put position is the combination of 1) a short put position and 2) a cash position equal to the maximum loss of the short put position. a) A covered put position is equivalent to a capped long position in the underlying stock. The covered put position will decline in value as the underlying declines in value and will increase in value as the underlying increases in value. b) The maximum amount a covered put position can earn is capped at the premium received from selling the puts. c) The maximum amount a covered position can lose is equal to the maximum loss of the short put position less the premium received from selling the puts. Definition 2 : The maximum loss of a short put position is the put strike times the number of options sold. Here is an example of a covered put position: An investor enters into a covered put position by first selling 1 put option on the S&P 500 Index. The put option strike is 1,880. The investor then allocates a cash position of $1,880.00 to cover his maximum loss. The $1,880.00 cash position is obtained from multiplying the put strike by the number of options sold or 1,880 x 1. This covered put position ensures that even if the S&P 500 Index goes to zero, the investor always will have enough cash to cover any loss when the put options expire and still have the premium from selling the puts. Now that we’ve got the basics out of the way, time to get to the meat of the matter. Below are what I call the ” maxims ” of covered put writing. They may surprise you. Maxim 1: A covered put position, over the term of the put (i.e., before the put option expires), is always a more defensive position than owning the underlying outright. That’s right, always . This is because the premium received from selling the put options provides a “buffer” against a declining underlying. Owning the underlying outright provides no such buffer. Maxim 2: The maximum gain from a covered put position over the term of the put is the total premium received from selling the puts. If the premium received is 2% (as measured as a percentage of the cash position), then 2% is most the covered put position can return over the term of the put, no matter how much the underlying increases in value Maxim 3: A covered put position is theoretically identical to a covered call position where both the puts and calls sold have the same strike . If you’re comfortable or familiar with covered call strategies, then you are, by definition, comfortable with covered put strategies . Covered put positions, however, can provide certain advantages over covered call positions which I will detail later. A Simple Systematic, Rolling Covered Put Writing Strategy All put options have expiration dates. When the put option in a covered put position expires, it must be “rolled” into a new put option with a new strike and expiration date. One simple Systematic Rolling Covered Put Writing Strategy (SRCPWS) is to sell and roll one-month, at-the-money put options. This strategy, it just so happens, is used by the CBOE S&P 500 PutWrite Index (PUT) . This index, which has been in existence since 1986, sells one-month, at-the-money puts on the S&P 500 Index on a monthly basis while investing its cash position in one-month and three-month T-Bills (The CBOE also has a covered call index, the CBOE S&P 500 BuyWrite Index (BXM) There are two listed ETFs available that follow a simple Systematic Rolling Covered Put Writing Strategy on the S&P 500. The first is the ALPS Enhanced Put Write Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA: PUTX ) and the second is the WisdomTree CBOE S&P 500 PutWrite Strategy Fund (NYSEARCA: PUTW ) . Both write one-month at-the-money puts on the S&P 500 every month and 100% collateralize the put options sold by investing their cash positions in either short-term T-bills or short-term investment-grade corporate notes. The Performance Attributes of a Systematic Rolling Covered Put Writing Strategy (SRCPWS) are best described by the “corollaries” presented below. To help illustrate these corollaries, I will use the historical performance of PUT versus the historical performance of the S&P 500 Total Return Index (SPTR). Corollary 1 of Maxim 1 Corollary 1 of Maxim 1 for a Systematic Rolling Covered Put writing strategy (such as implemented in PUT): If the underlying declines in value over consecutive “roll periods” (monthly in the case of PUT), an SRCPWS will never have a more negative return than an outright position in the underlying and will always outperform the underlying. – A corollary to the corollary is that the volatility of the SRCPWS will almost always be lower than the underlying in this scenario. Under this scenario, the premium received from selling options each roll period provides a downside buffer, allowing the SRCPWS to always outperform the underlying. A real life example of this is given in the chart below using the actual performance of PUT and SPTR (monthly data, using third Friday of each month). From 8/15/2008 to 11/21/2008, SPTR declined falling 39.3%. PUT over the same period fell only 30.4%. In addition, the annualized daily volatility of PUT was 54.1% while SPTR’s was 62.7%. Click to enlarge Another real-life example for this scenario is worth presenting and is presented in the chart below. In this example, SPTR had a negative return while PUT’s return was positive. From 12/19/2008 to 3/20/2009, SPTR declined each month, falling 12.7%. PUT over the same period increased 0.6%. In addition, the annualized daily volatility of PUT over this time period was 26.6% while SPTR’s was 38.3%. In this example not only did PUT outperform SPTR, but it also had a positive return while the underlying, SPTR, had a negative return. Click to enlarge Corollary 1 of Maxim 2 What if the underlying increases in value? That’s Corollary 1 of Maxim 2 : If the underlying increases in value over each “roll period” (monthly in the case of PUT), the SRCPWS will always have a positive return but may or may not outperform the underlying. – Again, a corollary to the corollary, is that the volatility of the SRCPWS will almost always be lower than the underlying in this scenario. Under this scenario, the return of the SRCPWS is capped by the total premium received from selling its options each roll period. If the underlying’s performance is less than the premium received, the SRCPWS will outperform the underlying. If the underlying’s performance is greater than premium received, the SRCPWS will underperform. For this scenario (i.e., where the underlying increases) two real life examples are needed. The first example, given in the chart below using the actual performance of PUT and SPTR, is for the case where the SRCPWS doesn’t outperform the underlying. From 3/20/09 to 01/15/2010, the SPTR increased by 50.48%. PUT over the same period increased only 35.19%. In addition, the annualized volatility of SPTR over this period was 69.3% while that of PUT was under half that value at 33.2%. Click to enlarge The second example is for the case where the SRCPWS does outperform the underlying and is given in the chart below using the actual performance of PUT and SPTR. From 1/20/2006 to 4/21/2006, the SPTR increased, steadily, by 4.43%. PUT over the same period increased 4.85%. In addition, the annualized volatility of PUT over this period was 4.97% while the annualized volatility of SPTR was 9.37%, over twice as much as PUT’s. Click to enlarge Of course, underlyings don’t just always go up or always go down. Markets (and underlyings, whatever they may be) may trend up or down, but they almost always are “volatile” around that trend. This brings me to Corollary 2 of Maxim 1. The SRCPWS may recover from a period of negative returns more slowly than the underlying. This corollary is actually a combination Corollary 1 of Maxim 1 and Corollary 1 of Maxim 2 . Corollary 1 of Maxim 1 says the SRCPWS will always outperform when the underlying declines in value while Corollary 1 of Maxim 2 says the SRCPWS may not outperform the underlying when the underlying increases in value. – Again, a corollary to the corollary, is that the volatility of the SRCPWS will almost always be lower than the underlying in this scenario. This makes sense because the return of the SRCPWS during any roll period is capped at the premium received from selling puts while the return on the underlying is not. How much more slowly the SRCPWS recovers than the underlying depends both on 1) how much the underlying increases over a given period of time and 2) the premiums received from selling the puts over that same period of time. The chart below presents a real-life example using the actual performance of PUT and SPTR. The chart shows that from 9/21/12 to 11/16/2012, SPTR declined 6.51% while PUT declined only 3.63%. The chart then shows that from 11/16/12 to 3/15/13 SPTR increased 15.65% while PUT increased 6.17%. Over the entire period, SPTR increased 8.12% while PUT increased 2.32%. In addition, the volatility of PUT over the entire period was 6.73% while the volatility of SPTR was 11.63% Click to enlarge Non-Zero Interest Rates – Treasury Bill or Investment-Grade Short-Term Corporate Note Investment In the beginning of this article, I assumed interest rates were zero to make things less complicated. PUT, however, invests all of its cash in one-month and three-month T-Bills. In this way, the return PUT generates is augmented by the interest income earned on its T-bill investments. Short-term interest rates are at historical lows but have been at much higher levels significantly contributing to the return PUT generated. Because PUT invests in short-term Treasury bills, when or if interest rates rise, the return generated by PUT from interest income will increase. Both PUTX and PUTW invest most of their cash in interest-bearing instruments. PUTX invests its cash mainly in short-term investment-grade corporate notes. PUTW invests its cash mainly in one-month and three-month T-bills. These investments in short-term investment-grade corporate notes or short-term T-bills collateralize (i.e., cover) the put options sold. Volatility, Downside Volatility and Downside Risk Adjusted Return Volatility: As is mentioned throughout this article, an SRCPWS will almost always have a lower volatility than its underlying. For all practical purposes, it’s fair to say that an SRCPWS will always have a lower volatility than its underlying because the change in value of the put option as a percent of the cash position is almost never greater than that of the underlying on any given day. It is possible, though, in unique circumstances for this not to be the case. And if the SRCPWS invests its cash in interest-bearing instruments, it’s also possible they could add to the volatility of the SRCPWS. Below is a table giving the annualized monthly volatility of PUT and SPTR over different time periods. The table shows PUT is about 65% as volatile as SPTR. Downside Volatility : Downside volatility is a measure of the volatility attributable to negative returns. Many investors believe that volatility from positive returns is not relevant to defining the risk of an investment and that the only important volatility is that generated from negative or adverse returns. Because an SRCPWS has an asymmetric return profile (i.e., can have a greater negative return than positive return in a given roll period), comparison of the downside volatility between the SRCPWS and its underlying is important. The downside volatility of an SRCPWS should almost always be less than that of its underlying for the same reason its volatility is almost always less than its underlying. The table below gives the annualized monthly downside volatility of PUT and SPTR. The downside volatility is ca lculated using a minimum acceptable return (MAR) equal to the average monthly return over the relevant time period (the average monthly return is identical to the “mean” used in the calculation of volatility above). The downside volatility of PUT is slightly less than 80% of the downside volatility of SPTR. Sortino Ratio : The Sortino Ratio is the “Sharpe Ratio” for skewed or asymmetric return profiles. It is a measure of the risk-adjusted return for these type strategies. However, many investors believe the Sortino Ratio is better than the Sharpe Ratio for all investment strategies because it does not penalize positive returns when “upside” volatility is high. The Sortino Ratio is calculated in the same way as the Sharpe Ratio but instead of using volatility , it uses downside volatility . Below is a table showing the Sortino Ratio and Sharpe Ratio for PUT and for SPTR. The downside volatility used in the Sortino Ratio was calculated using an MAR equal to the average monthly return over the relevant time period. Both the Sharpe Ratio and Sortino Ratio were calculated using a risk free rate (or target return) equal to the average three-month CMT rate over the relevant time period. This was done for the sake of simplicity and does not affect the comparison. There are two observations of interest. First, the PUT and SPTR Sortino Ratios are greater than the PUT and SPTR Sharpe Ratios for each time period. Second, the PUT Sortino Ratios are less than the SPTR Sortino Ratios in the three- and five-year time periods but are greater than the SPTR Sortino Ratios in the 10- and 28-year time periods. The first observation makes clear that the downside volatility is always less than the volatility for both PUT and SPTR. The second observation reveals that PUT’s risk-adjusted return (as measured by the Sortino Ratio) was worse than the risk-adjusted return of SPTR in both the three- and five-year time periods but better in the 10- and 28-year time periods. This occurred mainly because SPTR’s downside volatility decreased relative to its “overall” volatility in the three- and five-year periods while its return was better than PUT’s. Advantages of Covered Put Writing Over Covered Call Writing Earlier in this article I presented Maxim 3 : A covered put position is theoretically identical to a covered call position where both the puts and calls sold have the same strike . I further stated that covered put writing may provide certain advantages over covered call positions. When comparing the historical performance of the CBOE S&P 500 BuyWrite Index (a covered call index on the S&P 500 Index) and PUT, PUT handily outperforms. The chart below shows the PUT and BXM performance from 3/3/2006 to 3/4/2016: Click to enlarge Over this 10-year time period, PUT outperformed BXM by almost 26%. There are three reasons why this may have occurred: 1) In a covered call strategy, the number of options sold equals the number of shares owned. If BXM owns 100 shares of the S&P 500 Index, then it sells 100 options on the S&P 500 Index. PUT, however, does things slightly differently and, as a result, sells slightly more options. This is because PUT is collateralized by cash or cash equivalents and not shares of the S&P 500 Index. PUT sells a number of options such that the maximum loss (see above for definition) in each roll period is equal to the cash position plus the premium received from selling options. This means PUT takes in more option premium than BMX each roll period and can have greater returns as a result. 2) PUT sells put options that are at-the-money or slightly out-of-the-money. BXM does the same with its call options. However, slightly out-of-the money put options tend to have a slightly higher premium than slightly out-of-the-money call options. This can mean PUT takes in more option premium each roll period. 3) BXM owns shares of the S&P 500 Index and is short call options. PUT is long T-bills and short put options. PUT earns interest on the cash invested in T-bills while BXM earns dividends from its S&P 500 shares. It’s possible that interest income, all other things the same, can be greater than dividend income. Putting It All In Perspective Covered put writing is theoretically no different than covered call writing. If you’re comfortable with covered call writing, then you’re comfortable with covered put writing. Covered put writing may provide better returns that a similar covered call strategy. A covered put writing strategy can be considered a defensive strategy relative to an outright investment in the underlying. A covered put writing strategy is almost always less volatile and may provide better risk-adjusted returns than an outright investment in the underlying There are two broad market covered put writing ETFs available, ticker symbols PUTX and PUTW. Both write one-month at-the-money puts on the S&P 500 every month and 100% collateralize (i.e., cover) the put options sold by investing their cash positions in either short-term T-bills or short-term investment-grade corporate notes. Remember, the S&P 500 Index, the S&P 500 Total Return Index, the CBOE S&P 500 BuyWrite Index and the CBOE S&P 500 PutWrite Index are indexes. You cannot invest directly in an index Jeff Klearman is the Chief Investment Officer of Rich Investment Solutions and a Registered representative of ALPS Distributors, Inc. Rich Investment Solutions is the sub-advisor to the ALPS U.S. Equity High Volatility Put Write Index ETF (NYSEARCA: HVPW ) and the ALPS Enhanced Put Write Strategy ETF. ALPS Advisors, Inc. is the Investment Adviser to HVPW and PUTX, and ALPS Portfolio Solutions Distributor, Inc. is the Distributor for HVPW and PUTX. ALPS Advisors, Inc., ALPS Distributors, Inc. and ALPS Portfolio Solutions Distributor, Inc. are all affiliated entities. An investor should consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. To obtain a prospectus, which contains this and other information, call 1-866-759-5679 or visit alpsfunds.com . Read the prospectus carefully before investing. WisdomTree Funds are distributed by Foreside Fund Services, LLC. in the U.S. only. Click here to view or download prospectus for Wisdom Tree CBOE S&P 500 PutWrite Strategy Fund. We advise you to consider the fund’s objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus contains this and other important information about the fund. Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest. An investment in the Funds involves risk, including loss of principle.