I am sure that you never read your customer agreement.Are they legally allowed to do so?
I am sure that you never read your customer agreement.Are they legally allowed to do so?
I am sure that you never read your customer agreement.
Well, I did, but not all of it of course[/QUOTE
The teacher asks the student did you read the book assignment. He would reply like you. How does his answer sound to you?
Listen...options aren't as ezpz as stocks. You can buy a put and short a put at the same time and still profit when stock goes up. If you lock up one side, you lock up a gammut of different possibilities for risk control and you 100% do not satisfy the need for long puts by just hoping that another degenerate is selling to you. When you allow long puts, 90% of the volume is taken by a market maker, period.
Besides that, if you guys really want to buy a put, just buy a call and short stock or even better, just sell call spreads...it's the same.
I would not want to have my money at a broker that allows a couple of apes to dabble in options that are 550IV and get burned either way because the underlying is the squeeze of the century and the FEDs are looking into potential actions.
Safety first.
Yeah sure. The MAR straddle is about 370$ while the stock trades at 350.Selling Call spreads is a limited loss, limited profit play. Who wants a limited profit cap in such craziness. Even long puts is a limited profit play, but it's a much better risk/reward.
Yeah sure. The MAR straddle is about 370$ while the stock trades at 350.
Can you please tell me about that juicy risk/reward after your money went up in flames? Because when the IV drops from 500 back to below 100 your put will still lose money even tho the stock is cut in half while the spreader orders hookers and booze.
The more posts I read in this thread the more I like the fact that IB closes down shop for GME options. You guys really should not play this game