ES Journal Archive (2009 - 2010)

Status
Not open for further replies.
Quote from schizo:

While some might find it entertaining, I post my real time trades for a reason. When you trade as long as me (20 years and counting), you don't need others to literally walk with you hand in hand. They need only throw out a entry/exit number and you'll be able to decipher what they were thinking at the time. It also forces you to think for yourself. Hence, my belief that it's more instrumental to post real time trades for others to chew on.

This is what I've done with your real time posts, Schiz, and I can't thank you enough for posting. It's been an amazing help to me.
 
Real-time posts are almost always helpful to even moderately experienced traders that can spot reasons based on price, direction, targets, and stops.

I find it very hard to post as most of my trades are scalps.

I do try to post directional trades or breaks of perceived patterns. It is still difficult in the least.

So thanks Sal....and to others who post for others benefits.
 
Quote from schizo:

I couldn't have said it any better myself.



While some might find it entertaining, I post my real time trades for a reason. When you trade as long as me (20 years and counting), you don't need others to literally walk with you hand in hand. They need only throw out a entry/exit number and you'll be able to decipher what they were thinking at the time. It also forces you to think for yourself. Hence, my belief that it's more instrumental to post real time trades for others to chew on.

Also anyone can have an opinion of the market, in which case you're either right or wrong 50% of the time. By all means, there's nothing wrong with making calls per se. But this will never make you a better trader, period. Only way to improve yourself is to constantly challenge yourself and there's no better way than to hold yourself accountable. That is, posting trades in real time.

Dude, pay the clowns no mind. Keep flipping like only you can :D
 
As long as you don't use excessive leverage, being long a naked put is the same as being long a stock.

Here are the differences.

1) If you are long a stock, you only make money if the stock goes up, however, a stock can go up more than the premium you get for selling a naked put.

2) If you are long a naked put, you make money if the stock goes up before expiration, stays the same, or does not go below the target of the put and even if goes below the target of the put, you still don't lose money until it goes past the value of the put.

3) On both the put and the stock, you can have a stop loss either mental or hard to get you out of the trade.

4) Both can be affected by earnings report and if we are in a bear or bull market.

So lets assume you are long or short POT or CL, and an adverse event occurs, you would lose MORE money than me on THIS trade, because you are USING EXCESSIVE LEVERAGE to make HUGH AMOUNTS of money on SMALL movements of the price. This is trade is by far a much safer trade which is why I posted it.

Again, analyze the trade, I know you don't trade options. Usually you only get $ .05/contract if you want to sell a put 10 points below the stock price. DNDN right now is $ 37/sh, it has to fall below $ 23/sh before the 3rd week of Nov for me to lose money when they already received FDA approval, and these puts are selling for over $ 2/contract when I made the trade.

Quote from NoDoji:

Still biotechs always run the risk of an adverse news event driving the price into the toilet, even after an approval of a drug. Seems like MUCH safer ways to be long than naked puts. IMHO.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top