Updated
Updated · CNBC · Jun 9
Nishant Pant Recommends 40-Day QQQ Put Spreads After 4.8% ETF Drop
Updated
Updated · CNBC · Jun 9

Nishant Pant Recommends 40-Day QQQ Put Spreads After 4.8% ETF Drop

1 articles · Updated · CNBC · Jun 9

Summary

  • A 4.8% one-day slide in QQQ and options losses of 30%-60% prompted Pant to outline a hedge he has used for more than a year: a put spread that limits downside while cutting protection costs.
  • The setup buys a put about 3% below QQQ and sells another about 8% below with roughly 40 days to expiry; with QQQ near $705, that translates to a July $685/$650 spread.
  • Pant says he opens new hedges only when VIX is below 20—ideally 13-16—then sizes contracts to his portfolio's long-delta exposure and pays closer attention when seasonality or overbought RSI readings raise pullback risk.
  • In one example, a QQQ 725/690 spread opened for $5.50 per share when VIX was 15 more than doubled on June 5, hitting an $8.25 exit for a $275 per-contract gain that offset part of a $1,000-$1,500 loss in call spreads.
  • His 12-month review found 12 separate QQQ declines of at least 2% over seven trading days, arguing that even in bullish markets, regular pullbacks make recurring hedge costs worthwhile.

Insights

Beyond options, what are the best tools for protecting against sudden tech market downturns?
Is constantly 'insuring' your portfolio with options actually a losing strategy in the long run?
If hedging is so effective, why do most investors still get caught in market crashes?