That's something an option professional cam answer. I just started playing these type of options about 6 months ago
My guess is the premium is higher. Monthlies pay more than quarterlies, and weeklies pay more than monthlies.
That's something an option professional cam answer. I just started playing these type of options about 6 months ago
Do you mind posting your list? We all then could try to complete the list.
Any other ones with daily or every other day? Why aren't daily's offered for stocks like tesla, nvda, aapl, amzn, msft, amd etc?
https://www.barchart.com/options/volume-leaders/stocks
My guess is the premium is higher. Monthlies pay more than quarterlies, and weeklies pay more than monthlies.
Hmm. Regarding Spreads you should study this example (by TDA) comparing a CSP to a PutSpread:No spreads. Never give back premium to hedge...premium is the hedge.
W/o Spread (ie. CSP) the MarginReq is $13,290.Vertical Spreads: Lower Margin Requirement Hurdle to Target Capital Efficiency
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In this example, turning the cash-secured put into a put vertical spread lowered your potential profit by $25, but reduced your margin requirement by a whopping $12,890 per contract.
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Bottom Line on Selling Single-Leg vs. Vertical Spreads
Capital preservation and capital efficiency are two cornerstones of options trading. By vastly reducing a margin requirement, you’re making funds available for your next trading opportunity.
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My guess is the premium is higher. Monthlies pay more than quarterlies, and weeklies pay more than monthlies.
I'm referring to stocks with daily expirations, not weekly expirations.
IWM (2 days)
SPY (daily)
QQQ ( daily)
XSP (daily)
SPX (daily)
Hmm. Regarding Spreads you should study this example (by TDA) comparing a CSP to a PutSpread:
W/o Spread (ie. CSP) the MarginReq is $13,290.
Using a PutVerticalSpread instead of the CSP drops the MarginReq to just $400 (!) only.
You give up only $25 of the potential profit of $110 to achieve such a huge reduction in MarginReq.
IMO it's a good deal.
But then maybe not, when trading 0DTE with StopLoss orders.
If you trade index options then no assignment, b/c these are European style (no early assignment, and no underlying stock, ie. is cash settled like what the PnL chart shows at exp for the index value).Yes but reducing the margin doesn't increase how much of the underlying I can afford to get assigned.
If you trade index options then no assignment, b/c these are European style (no early assignment, and no underlying stock, ie. is cash settled like what the PnL chart shows at exp for the index value).