There are nice safe hedgy options, and then there are dangerous, volatile,
and prone-to-blowing-up options, the kind of things which have a habit of biting
Niederhoffer in the ass. It’s these kind of options which Warren Buffett
famously referred to as "financial weapons of mass destruction". So
you can imagine my surprise when I read
this, this morning:
This year, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the Omaha, Neb., holding company headed
by Mr. Buffett, has collected premiums of about $2.5 billion from selling
insurance on stock indexes and bonds in the form of derivative contracts,
which guarantee payment to the buyer in the event of a specific loss in an
underlying entity of the contracts.
Sounds to me like Buffett has been making billions of dollars doing one of
the riskiest derivatives trades there is: selling out-of-the-money puts.
Now this trade does sometimes (often, actually, during market panics) make
sense, and a lot of money. And one can usually make much higher risk-adjusted
returns selling out-of-the-money put options on the stock market than one can
buying structured products from investment banks. What’s more, Warren Buffett
has the first thing that anybody needs if they’re going to play this game: very,
very deep pockets. But still. Buffett? We always thought you nobler
than this.