I have a loss of 1.400% by

Quote from bbmat:

Just received this private message from bbmat:

..."du scheinst,
einer von den scheiss arroganten Saecken in Deutschland zu sein, die immer noch denken dass Ihr Witz-Diplom besser waere als ein Bachelor Degree in den USA oder anderswo. Hast Du ueberhaupt studiert? (zu Deiner Info: Alle Top 50 U.S. Unis verlangen fuer einen Master Degree genauso ein abgeschlossenes Diplom Studium aus Deutschland wie einen Bachelor von Studenten, die in den USA gelernt haben.)

Deine arrogante Art regt micht ueberhaupt nicht mehr auf, weil ich taeglich mit so Typen zu tun habe in Frankfurt, die denken dass was sie hier in Deutschland an der Uni gelernt haben sowieso um Laengen besser ist als alles was man an einer US Uni lernen kann. Ich habe an einer sehr guten US Uni gelernt und ich weiss nur dass die Typen die hier in Deutschland in meiner Bank nach der Uni landen keinen scheiss blassen Schimmer von irgendwelchen Pricing Modellen haben noch keine Ahnung was Riskomanagement angeht. Haltet Ihr erstmal den Mund, wir und andere Kollegen aus den USA die in Frankfurt arbeiten mussten Euch naemlich erstmal erklaeren was eine SWAP Kurve ist, und wie man mit Forward Rates und Treasury Strips andere Instrumente bepreisen kann. Also, immer langsam in der Suppe ruehren und dann erst den Mund aufmachen.....das ist mein heisser Tip an Dich.

Traume Du von Typen wie Tudor Jones , das sei Dir nicht vergoennt waehrend ich und andere Deine $ vom Teller kratzen."
 
I am short 40 call's on RMBS 3 days to expire worthless and this happens (those of you who havent seen the premarket trade price on RMBS it's up 41% already!).:(
 
a riskless gain working for someone else, I earn a lot, I love my job, I love being around many really smart people, I love the satisfaction of getting paid a great bonus when my performance was great, and I accept some or no bonus if my performance sucked. But I still go home in the end of the day, knowing that I have got a great job which I like.

Need more reasons?

What others feel or think, I do not care its their life. I love my life and job and want to stay that way ;-)

BTW, do you think I care whether you post my PMs or not? I could not care less. BTW, its in German, if you think you can piss into my car then you also need to translate my PM so all can understand. But be careful, it could backfire.


Quote from heilbronner:

You seem to be a smart ass, congrats. But why do you still have to work for somebody else???:D
:)
 
Quote from wwatson1:

I am short 40 call's on RMBS 3 days to expire worthless and this happens (those of you who havent seen the premarket trade price on RMBS it's up 41% already!).:(


Rambus (RMBS:Nasdaq - commentary - research) scored a major win late Tuesday when the Federal Trade Commission dropped an antitrust suit against the company.

In premarket trading Wednesday, shares soared $10.11 or 39% to $35.95. The stock closed Tuesday at $25.84, up 31 cents, or 1.2%.


Oh, f. sh...t. What are you going to do now? Hope this doesn't hurt you that much.
 
Quote from bbmat:

[...]

BTW, do you think I care whether you post my PMs or not? I could not care less. BTW, its in German, if you think you can piss into my car then you also need to translate my PM so all can understand. But be careful, it could backfire.


:)

Watch out heil, one day he might send you the gestapo! :D
 
Quote from wwatson1:

I am short 40 call's on RMBS 3 days to expire worthless and this happens (those of you who havent seen the premarket trade price on RMBS it's up 41% already!).:(


Actually, very good idea. Now I'm with you.

Thanks.
 
Quote from wwatson1:

I am short 40 call's on RMBS 3 days to expire worthless and this happens (those of you who havent seen the premarket trade price on RMBS it's up 41% already!).:(

Years ago when I was stupid enough to be looking at short options strategies, I asked an options broker if I could create a regular income stream through selling premium on calls or puts.

"Can't do it," he said.

"But why not?", I asked.

"Because shit happens," was his answer.

Of course I thought I had it all figured and didn't listen to his simple advice. Many thousands of dollars in losses later, I too realized that shit happens when you least expect it, and a short call or put gone bad isn't worth all the effort put into collecting a small premium, no matter how fail-safe the position may seem to be.
 
Quote from lindq:

Years ago when I was stupid enough to be looking at short options strategies, I asked an options broker if I could create a regular income stream through selling premium on calls or puts.

"Can't do it," he said.

"But why not?", I asked.

"Because shit happens," was his answer.

Of course I thought I had it all figured and didn't listen to his simple advice. Many thousands of dollars in losses later, I too realized that shit happens when you least expect it, and a short call or put gone bad isn't worth all the effort put into collecting a small premium, no matter how fail-safe the position may seem to be.


Blair Hull: "I was consistently making money, but that kind of strategy - selling deep out of the money options - only leads to consistent profits until a catastrophe arises."
 
what that broker was trying to tell you, and I will tell you why: Given nearly perfectly arbitraged option prices, the risk of near-sudden moves is already priced into the option and therefore from a option seller's risk standpoint, this risk is estimable. This fact does not help you with your one single position, no doubt about it (especially not in a stock option pos.). However, when looking at an option portfolio and over the longer term, short option positons are at much better odds than a long options portfolio: In simple terms: A long bet needs to be right about the extent of the move, the direction, AND the timing of the move. A short bet needs only be right about expected volatility. Statistics clearly show that most options expire worthless.

I will tell you why your broker told you such wrong thing: Most sellers in options tend to hold on to their positions until expiration (unless having estimated volatility incorrectly) cause this is their job, earning money with time. Buyers of options tend to trade much more frequently, something your broker depends on.

One tip: Consider selling options on index futures. The underlying's price behavior is much more smoothed out rather than a single stock which is subject to merger announcements/ and other unsystematic risk.

Quote from lindq:

Years ago when I was stupid enough to be looking at short options strategies, I asked an options broker if I could create a regular income stream through selling premium on calls or puts.

"Can't do it," he said.

"But why not?", I asked.

"Because shit happens," was his answer.

Of course I thought I had it all figured and didn't listen to his simple advice. Many thousands of dollars in losses later, I too realized that shit happens when you least expect it, and a short call or put gone bad isn't worth all the effort put into collecting a small premium, no matter how fail-safe the position may seem to be.
 
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