Is there a way to find out what happened around certain date in the past?
For example, by reviewing other traders' trade log on Internet, I found him
"Bought AMZN Apr 50 Put @ $10.60. " on Dec. 4, 2008.
How do I review this trade?
I want to find out what happened around that date Dec...
Is there a way to find out what happened around certain date in the past?
For example, by reviewing other traders' trade log on Internet, I found him
"Bought AMZN Apr 50 Put @ $10.60. " on Dec. 4, 2008.
How do I review this trade?
I want to find out what happened around that date Dec...
Your points are well-taken. Thank you!
I am at the stage of learning from other people and formulating my own style through trial and error.
Please come back to the (objective) risk/reward of the trading styles.
In IB, how do I print out all trades for later review?
Something like this:
6/17/2008 .AAOSJ SOLD TO CLOSE 49 CONTRACTS OF OPTION .AAOSJ AT $2.30 ($68.32) $0.00 $11,201.68
6/17/2008 .AAOSJ SOLD TO CLOSE 21 CONTRACTS OF OPTION .AAOSJ AT $2.30 ($26.28) $0.00 $4,803.72...
Hi all,
Let's say I saw some other traders' tradelog on Internet and want to learn from him, what software can mostly efficiently help me go into the details of historical intra-day data to review his trades?
Example:
6/17/2008 .AAOSJ SOLD TO CLOSE 49 CONTRACTS OF OPTION .AAOSJ AT...
I was wondering in terms of risk/return, which trading style (of course we are talking about option trading) is actually better, day trading, swing trading, or mid-long term?
I cannot even finish WSJ and FT, not to say Economist, too bad...
You guys all read these stuff, plus numerous online stuff?
Too many things to read and too little time...
Any thoughts?
Synthetic call, that begins to make sense, given the good news coming next Monday...
So the buy-in of the put and the stock were separate.
Why would somebody do this synthetic call stuff, instead of buying an outright call?
Does anybody know if actually there is any benefit to daytrade options? Given that options traditionally are slow investments, and daytrading cost a lot of energy...