I'm going to be a bit enigmatic here and suggest that the number 411 will soon be mentioned by Derivman . . . watch this space.
Quote from A Dashing Blade:
I'm going to be a bit enigmatic here and suggest that the number 411 will soon be mentioned by Derivman . . . watch this space.
Quote from GTS:
Huh? If the calls you buy expire worthless then you cannot roll them over without losing money. I don't mean to be rude, but it sounds like you are throwing out a lot of terms you read without understanding them.
If you are an existing ES emini trader how can you not know what zero-sum is?
It is not debatable, if you agree that futures is zero sum then you must agree that options are zero sum - it is the same principle; for every option seller there is an option buyer.Quote from Derivman:
Hi GTS and thanks again. Having traded the ES E-mini I know that every tick I lose someone else wins as I can see my PL reducing in realtime so I agree with you fully here and will say that trading the ES is a Zero Sum Game in that for every tick I lose the trader who hold sthe opposite position to my opening trade will gain. Again according to my study so far on Options it seems to be debatable as to whether it is a Zero Sum Game for Options trading.Cheers.
Quote from Derivman:
Hi GTS and thanks again. Having traded the ES E-mini I know that every tick I lose someone else wins as I can see my PL reducing in realtime so I agree with you fully here and will say that trading the ES is a Zero Sum Game in that for every tick I lose the trader who hold sthe opposite position to my opening trade will gain. Again according to my study so far on Options it seems to be debatable as to whether it is a Zero Sum Game for Options trading.Cheers.
Derivman
Quote from Derivman:
I can always roll over positions without losing money if they expire worthless.
Quote from Derivman:
Here is the link to one of my educational sites.Cheers.
Derivman
And if you read the next sentence it says "Consider an investor that owns stock and purchases a protective put. "Quote from Derivman:
Apologies GTS as I forget to include the link in relation to Zero Sum Game and Options as follows:
http://www.optionsnewsletter.com/expert2.asp
Paul raises some very good points here such as:
"Another common myth is: "For every options winner, there's a loser." (a.k.a. zero sum game)
This is not true because different options strategies offer "win-win" situations."
Quote from GTS:
It is not debatable, if you agree that futures is zero sum then you must agree that options are zero sum - it is the same principle; for every option seller there is an option buyer.
The only people who claim that neither are zero sum are those that include external products in the picture.
For instance if you own a stock and sell a call, you might lose money on the call (if the stock rises) but make money on the stock so from that one person's perspective they didn't lose money but they did lose on the call itself. If you only look at the options market it is zero sum - it has to be.
BTW, you said you were going to include a link to an educational site that explained why the two examples you listed were not both zero sum but you neglected to include that link.
Quote from GTS:
And if you read the next sentence it says "Consider an investor that owns stock and purchases a protective put. "
Just as I thought, they are including things besides options (stock) to make the claim.
Options are zero-sum (excluding transaction costs as DblArrow pointed out).