If I'm getting correctly your scenario, you intended to prove the superiority of substituting LEAPS for the stock when selling front month calls on it. It works if your forecast is correct, but there are other scenarios that would prove as well that purchasing the stock would be more profitable, and scenarios that prove that both scenarios would drain your account.Quote from hankster:
Okay, let me use an example most of us on this thread are familiar with and that is APA.
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In summary, this board is made up of all kinds of traders, the best and the rest. lol
I put myself into the rest category.
For the rest, longer term cost more to play but your chances of winning are far greater than the short term.
You have only to go back and read the great posts to see what I mean.
I enjoy the healthy and polite debate.
hank
I stick with my opinion that the strategy you suggest is too risky for me. If I were to use LEAPS, at least I would buy deep-in-the-money LEAPS.
When you put on any trade you should have a written trading plan that spells out clearly what you'll do if the trade goes against you: where's your stop-loss (or rolling point if that's what you plan to do).
I don't want to sound discouraging, and I respect your opinion, but please make sure that you understand your risk under all possible market conditions, considering the adverse movement of both price and implied volatility over the life of your position.
Check out these links:
calendar spreads (your LEAP play is a calendar spread)
LEAPS
LEAPS
LEAPS
LEAPS
LEAPS
LEAPS
Hope it helps.

) take my advice and enter OVTI --? (see above)