To put things in perspective, making 20-30% per year (not 1.5 months) trading options is a very nice gains
Getting to 50-80% would put you in the elite of options traders
Making triple digit returns would make you one of the best traders in the world
Takes years and years of practice
Description of his approach:
- short term - get in, get out - nice profit, SOLD
- don't commit 100% of funds, always have cash
- pair trades - I'd be long MS calls but have some puts on the XLF
- take a break (1-2 days) and don't trade when I kept making wrong decisions; give up on loser companies
- target high dollar stocks via options (a $5 stock up 10% is okay, but a fucking longshot ... whereas a mere 3% move on a $100 stock makes a big difference in options and can easily happen)
- avoid options with high premiums baked in although sometimes with names like AMZN, or GOOGL (wanted to buy GOOGL 940s to start this week) it's hard to avoid. But those googs were trading at ~ $2.75 while the stock was still $13 away from the strike ...okay, fucking Friday they were worth $33. That's what I mean from my last bullet point - GOOGL had only a 3% move but that option went x10
If you don't mind me asking, what are your entry criteria ?I have found buying short term index options typically three weeks until expiration, at the money, to be profitable. I use a time stop of two days maximum on sideways trades and a money management stop of 50% original premium. My exit point is based on the trade type. My allocation for a single trade is up to 5% of my option account, with my maximum overall allocation of 10% for multiple positions.
I get great leverage and an extreme overnight move against me would not be catastrophic. The downside is the transaction costs are higher with this type of trading.
If you don't mind me asking, what are your entry criteria ?
Thanks, interesting. I've been trading a similar ATM strategy with a slightly longer time frame. Simplified, I'm trading a reversion to trend with entry defined by a price action turn back to the primary trend.I look for a swing trade setups using active at-the-money options of two to five weeks before expiration. The criteria for me is as follows: an established trend as measured by the slope of an 8 day simple moving average in the underlying, a low volume pullback lasting two or three days, a risk environment consistent with the expected direction of the trade, and some encouraging price action in the inside market, such as bids holding up well to hits if I'm considering a long.
My holding period typically ranges from three to five days. I allow flexibility in the entry and exit periods to allow my other criteria to be met.
My trade exit is a break through most recent support or resistance. I use two stop loss points. I close the position if the premium drops 50% or a time stop if the trade is not profitable by the second day. A premium drop of 50% is roughly the equivalent to the underlying price exceeding the prior days high or low against me on these short-term options.
My results of this system have been modest. Option trading costs are high and I felt it necessary to pay the spread on my profitable, in-the-money options, but now have become lightly traded. If I did not have an Interactive Brokers account, my option trading would show a net loss.
Actually, to clarify my previous, my option swing trading is mostly on NON-index ETF's (and only those with the most liq options). The ATR is larger with better R:R opportunities in my opinion.good info on the index options, I have been looking into doing some SPY and SPX option trades, doing put credit spreads, about 3 months out, about 10% OTM, usually close at about 1 month before expiry, and start another one.