Alright, I am done here, the rest is just conversation as they say.
lol really? I was hoping that we could toy with you a bit longer. We haven't had any special ppl like you since marketsurfer.
Alright, I am done here, the rest is just conversation as they say.
She spent $300K of investor's capital rolling DITM calendars to perpetuate her fraud. Imagine rolling calendar each month and throwing away 300K in cash simply to generate fees from the fraud.
professionals buy optionsI read on many blogs/websites that there's a "house advantage" to writing options, because most options expire worthless, etc.
I don't see how there could be an inherent advantage to selling options, since you can only sell what someone is willing to buy, and unless the seller had more information than the buyer, it should be even. It's also pointless to me when someone says 80% of options expire worthless, since it's not win-loss percents that matter, but rather profits (1 big win can offset 20 small loses).
Am I missing something? Is there another reason why there's an advantage to selling?
Why do people buy options? For insurance or leverage. When you sell options, you are paid for providing that service. You are being paid to assume risk. If it was a losing proposition, on average, then people would not do it. Same with car insurance. Most people don't buy car insurance expecting to use it. But if insurers on average only broke-even, they simply would not do it. So averaged over a large number of occurrences, there should be an advantage to providing that service, otherwise it would not be offered.
Why do people buy options? For insurance or leverage. When you sell options, you are paid for providing that service. You are being paid to assume risk. If it was a losing proposition, on average, then people would not do it. Same with car insurance. Most people don't buy car insurance expecting to use it. But if insurers on average only broke-even, they simply would not do it. So averaged over a large number of occurrences, there should be an advantage to providing that service, otherwise it would not be offered.
Vol trades inverse to price, generally, and certainly in tech. Price the same strike put against the CC. Say the shares are trading 115 and I sell the 120C at 14. The put is trading at 19. Weeks pass and ROKU is trading 70. The 120P is trading at 50 1/4. You're down 31 and change on your combination (covered call). Where is the juice? Sure, you're not shorting the 120C which is now 50 points OTM, but vomma is small in OTM options. What's 10 more on the vol-line on a 20D call in ROKU? $0.30?
There are no repair strategies. Yes, you're going to replicate the position at a higher vol-line, but you're out $30/share.
Look at risk adjusted returns and Sharpe ratio.I do.
@destriero - as usual, it's going to take me a while to parse what you wrote (usually resulting in a significant amount of learning, so it's not like I mind.) And thanks to a convo with @Wheezooo, I largely get how mark-to-market works - seeing this trade as a loss and the later trades I made as gains. What I don't get, other than as an accounting practice, is why I'd want to see it that way: without the position I was in as a result of those earlier trades, I couldn't have made those gains - right?
I also recall a position you had on where the price moved against you, and you - um, "fixed" it.
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/dests-everything-journal.332136/page-28#post-4931400
Not arguing with your assertion, but I don't understand the difference between repairing a trade gone bad and the above.
I never adjusted/repaired the initial fly. I stated I was down 2% on net liq due to the fly. I held it.