@thecoder Your puts are nothing new. They trade already in crude oil and interest rate options on futures. You're copywriting something that already exists and is used in practice by thousands of traders.
What you clearly don't understand is those products are inherently different than stocks and equity indexes. Crude oil and interest rate products have theoretically unlimited upside and downside risk, which allows the puts to have equal payout as the calls. Stocks have limited downside risk, and therefore the puts can't payout the same as the calls. You have no clue on how to apply the appropriate calculations of probability, variance, volatlity, z-scores, and standard deviation. They are product specific.
What you clearly don't understand is those products are inherently different than stocks and equity indexes. Crude oil and interest rate products have theoretically unlimited upside and downside risk, which allows the puts to have equal payout as the calls. Stocks have limited downside risk, and therefore the puts can't payout the same as the calls. You have no clue on how to apply the appropriate calculations of probability, variance, volatlity, z-scores, and standard deviation. They are product specific.
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