you got pinned. if it's close like that and you don't want to worry about it you should always close out. luckily it was a covered call and not a position that left you short a stock that gapped up on Monday or long something that fell of a cliff over the weekend.
and technically when if you day trade a spread each leg is it's own day trade. so your typical debit/credit spread would be 2 day trades, regular butterfly is 3 day trades, iron condor 4, etc..but not all firms from what I've seen do it that way. some will say if you put it on as a spread and...
yeah, basically how it works is if I carried the XYZ March 15 calls long overnight I can sell them to close and buy them back later that same day and it's not considered a day trade. But if I first add to my position and then close out then it's a day trade even if I didn't close out the entire...
sorry, but that is not the case. it is not a round trip if you close out a long position and re-establish it. only if you close it again. when it comes to day trading the sequence of events matters.
(B) Day Trading
(i) The term âday tradingâ means the purchasing and selling or the...
thats correct. otherwise every time someone traded a spread it would be considered a day trade, right? I think I recall reading once where a firm would consider the exercise and assignment of an ITM spread to be a day trade on the stock which is ridiculous. If there is a firm that still does...
yes, that is correct. if you open it and close it the same day then it's a day trade. you can close out a position you held overnight and then re-establish it and that is not a day trade. Open & close = day trade, close & re-open = no day trade
Yeah, but they have to at least look at the account to see what the positions are. Otherwise they'd be buying back everyone's ITM covered calls on expiration.
I've heard several horror stories like that one. I'd say it's a little different though because in that one it doesn't look like...
To be able to answer this I'd need to know the number of calls & puts sold, the current market price of the options, and the price of the underlying. Going back to the positions you listed in your first question on this thread you'd have requirements of this:
Naked put -40 NVDA 21 puts req =...
I'm sure they can see how the position is paired, they would have to in order to determine the amount of cash he can spend vs how much they have to hold out in requirements. I know they do this in effort to reduce risk but they actually created risk in his case. What if the stock had opened...