Category Archives: strategy

What Is the 0 DTE Strategy?

The time running out strategy


The time running out strategy
  • The Basic Strategy
  • High Risk vs Low Risk
  • Best Strategy for 0DTE

A 0DTE strategy makes money by taking advantage of premium decay, which occurs at an exponential rate until it is completely gone by the final second of the options contract life. The type of options strategies used to collect this premium usually include; the Iron Condor, Butterfly, and in some cases a vertical spread.

Generally 0DTE strategies are applied to European style options so that there is no risk of getting assigned early. So this means options on the S&P futures or index are good candidates, but there’s also options of the Nasdaq futures and Index as well, however there are differences that might make one preferable over the other.

The factors or characteristics of the various available contracts should be considered, those include; the size of the contract, the commissions, liquidity and bid-ask spreads. And another very important factor is when it is traded, for instance futures are traded around the clock, while indexes are available only during market hours. Another factor is how often is it traded, is it one a week, 3 times a week, or 5 days a week.

One additional factor is the very nature of the underlying, and the ability to perform technical analysis on it in order to model your options strategy. Indexes are calculated, they are not traded directly, so there is no volume, where futures are traded and have volume. So if volume is important to you, then futures will be important to you.

The Basic Strategy

Analyze the asset to determine the best time and place to position an options strategy to collect the maximum amount of premium.

Risk is a big factor, so you have to determine the best way to manage risk. There are two risk management schemas or spectrums that you can employ.

  1. Manage Risk: You can do high probability trades, which mean that the risk is very large compared to the potential profit, however there’s a high probability that you will profit. Which basically means that you need to have strong risk management. With high probability trades you will have a lot of small wins, and hopefully you can manage away the risk of large losses.
  2. Manage Profit: You can do relatively low probability trades, where the risk is very small compared to the potential return. There’s a lower probability of achieving max profit, however there’s a larger spectrum of positive results, meaning you don’t need strong risk management, you need strong profit management. With low probability trades you may have fewer wins, but your losses will be very small, and you have the chance to have very large returns.

High Risk vs Low Risk

There’s conventional wisdom that you have to risk a lot to make a lot. This is simply not true with options trading. It would be more correct to say that high risk options strategies will produce more winners, but those winners will be very small and the risks will be very large. The idea is that you can manage the risk away, and enjoy beautiful consistent income. This is a pipe dream.

The low probability trade, otherwise known as the asymmetric risk to reward trade, says that you take very small risks so that you are never hurt by any one or any number of losses. And in exchange, you have the chance to make very large returns…but one thing that is not often mentioned, is that you also have the opportunity to make a spectrum of returns from small to large as well. You simply don’t have that with high probability trades, there are no big winners unless you oversize you position and bet the farm and risk ruin.

With the low probability trade there is mathematically a positive outcome if all things are equal and probabilities are normally distributed. With high probability trades there is a negative outcome. This says it all, simply put, low probability trades have an edge over high probability trades.

The problem with most people is that they like the idea of winning a lot, rather than losing a lot, regardless of the size of the wins and losses. They don’t worry about the big potential losses until they hit.

The biggest difference is in the level of anxiety between the two strategies. With high probability trades you are almost always put into a losing situation immediately, requiring you to manage risk most of the time. Where the low probability trader is never in any peril, as the losses are small, so there’s no need to manage them, they are more consumed with managing profits and trying to maximize those profits, particularly when there’s a chance at a max profit which can be quite spectacular. It just doesn’t happen often.

The other thing about the low probability trader that is overlooked is that while they don’t win as often, the amount that they win is almost always much larger than the wins made by the high probability systems. So they have fewer and smaller drawdowns and less volatility in their equity curves. And generally their profits rise faster at a more consistent rate over the longer timeframe.

The Best Strategy for 0DTE

After considerable experience with both strategy regimes and using all the available asset types, it is clear that the best strategy is the low probability asymmetric system, using SPX options to trade and a futures serogate to perform the analysis. This way you get the best of all the various characteristics.

0-DTE.com is the only service that trades this way. In additional to that, we do not use traditional technical analysis, instead we use volumetric analysis, which is considered the standard for institutional and other professional traders.

Our results speak for themselves. Our traders have virtually no anxiety, they make more money on far less capital than the other 0DTE strategies. About 5X more money on 10X less capital.

OTM 0DTE Butterfly

The Out of The Money (OTM) Zero Days To Expiration (0DTE) butterfly may be the perfect strategy. It has asymmetric risk to reward, and incredible profit making potential with very little risk. The only tiny little caveat is that you have to have both the price and timing correct. Or, do you?

The best time to put on a premium collection strategy is just after volatility has peaked, and it’s on the way down. Why is that? That’s because the elevated volatility will allow you to buy a cheap butterfly with wider wings, and that provides 3 things. Great range of prices where you can be right, smaller risk and greater profit making potential. There is a 4th thing, and that’s after you placed the trade, with volatility dropping, the rate at which premium is decaying has increased. It’s the perfect storm, but in a good way. Maybe the perfect rainbow would be a better description?

The great thing about the butterfly is that it is a premium collection strategy, it is extremely flexible, it is easy to create an asymmetric trading opportunity, and it is perfect for short term trading, like that in a 0DTE situation.

Around the Clock 0DTE SPX Trading Coming Soon

One of the biggest drawbacks of trading a 0DTE strategy with options on the SPX index is that you are limited to taking trades during market hours. This will change as of November 21st 2021 when the Cboe (Cboe: CBOE) has announced plans to extend the global trading hours session (GTH) for its S&P 500 Index options (SPX) and Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) options to 23 hours each business day in the fourth quarter of 2021.

This is tremendous news for traders of 0-DTE strategies. These are strategies that take advantage of the extraordinary opportunities provided by 3 options expiration days a week.

Now that there’s no limit to when you can open a trade, it means better fills, more potential premium, and the benefit of a cash settled contract. This is a distinct advantage over options on the e-mini futures for the S&P, which has always traded around the clock, but assignment is through the actual contract, which can cause margin problems and risk for traders.

We are looking forward to this fantastic opportunity. Trading the e-mini around the clock has made it the odds on favorite, but the assignment risks and heavy commissions and fees made it concerning for some traders. We still need the futures contract for analysis because it has volume, which the SPX does not have, being a calculated index and no actual shares get traded.

The margin requirements for options on the SPX are about 4X that of options on futures, but the liquidity is much better. With all things considered, trading 0-DTE strategies on the SPX around the clock is going to be a huge success for us and our trading community. We are looking forward to it. Learn to Trade S&P Options on the Last Day of Expiration with super low risk, huge potential profits, and In a tiny window of time.