Quote from AK(m):
i am newbie on the forum and options. My broker have told me that options trading is more risky in comparison with futures and reccomended me to have at least 25k $ on account to trade options. I suppose it was not a full truth and the main reason is that active futures day traders are most attractive clients for any broker. Option traders can not make good profit for brokers and that was the main reason. Am i right?
thanks in advance
Excuse me english is not native for me.
So, a retail broker has two issues.
1. How do I make commissions?
2. How to I prolong the life of this client so that I make more commissions?
The first point is pretty simple. Point the client to products with higher commissions, and sell it to them by explaining the added upside, be it through leverage, or maybe the notion that this is a âspecial dealâ in some way, access to something not all clients get etc.. This is short term stuff. Earn superior commissions before they blow up and go away.
The second point is a bit trickier, and involved the broker possibly working for the same team as the client to some extent. If the client doesn't blow up fast, then maybe there's some longer term commissions to be earned. In this situation the broker is probably putting you into products with less leverage, but hopes you'll trade a lot, and do so for some time, only eroding your capital gradually. With lower leverage, you'll probably bleed to death rather then outright blow up.
Regarding futures vs options, it depends on which option & whether you're buying or writing them.
Perhaps the simplest metric is to compare the volatility of the instrument to the transaction cost, to figure out just how bad a deal your commissions are. But that may be to complex an answer.
What's your objective? â Other than âto make moneyâ through trading.