Thanks Carl
Quote from sebastionay:
Thanks for all the great advice guys Im glad I found this forum.
Ive just been reading options demystified by thomas mccafferty.
Seemed to be a good choice as there are questions at the end of each section.
What other good options books are there?
Quote from TraderZones:
be very very slow about options. Options writers (sellers) tend to make some money and them blow up suddenly
Options buyers are purchasing a leaking balloon, hoping to make money.
If you have an edge, buying & holding options is a great way to give up that edge to time decay.
There is nothing inherently "better" about options, especially to someone newer to them. Time decay, the greeks, various strike prices, in/out of the money and other things make them more difficult to fathom.
If you want to trade, it is better just to trade the underlying instrument. If you want leverage, you can get that on stocks or futures. You have more liquidity and less other things complicating your trade.
If you plan to hold very short term (like a couple of hours), then not such a big deal. But it is better only to go into them when you have a LOT of knowledge and a lot more experience.
Unless you a verifiable, tested edge given by something within options themselves, it does not make much sense.
Quote from JohnGreen:
If you see a book or website that promises returns like 10% every month, avoid it like the plague. Getting large returns involves taking large risks.
Quote from sebastionay:
Thanks for clearing it up for me I just don't know enough about options yet.
That statement tells you everything you need to know for right now. Take the time to learn what you are doing with options. Do not trade with real money until you have a very good understanding of how options work and what they can do for you.
If you must get bearish, sell stock short.
So I would want to buy puts instead.
An invalid conclusion. There are other choices.
What kind of leverage can I get with options?
Once again, this is an inappropriate question. Leverage works when you know what you are doing. Leverage also increases risk substantially. is that your goal? High risk when you don't know what you are trading?
That is the path to ruin. That's not preaching. That's the truth.
From what I have read so far it seems that around 26% of options traders are profitable and I expect that a lot of the profitable ones have bearish inclinations.
An imaginary statistic. The vast majority of traders lose everything they invest. I'd wager that less than 10% of traders ever earn a dime.
In forex around 97% of the traders loose money according to a friend of mine that's a FX broker.
Forex is hardly the place to be learning about options. I'm not telling you what to trade, but quieter markets make it easier to learn.
So how can I apply the most leverage into these bear market moves with options?
That is a terrible question. It establishes you as a gambler. Gamblers have no edge, no advantage and thus, the super-vast majority go broke. You may get lucky, but you are making a huge error to seek maximum leverage when you don't have any idea how an option works.
There is more to being short than merely buying puts. And you have no clue how much to pay for puts or which puts to choose. Big mistake.
What brokerage will offer me the best deal for a deposit of around $1000 (UK resident)
You need far more money to trade than that. If you buy puts and don't get the market result you anticipate, your entire account (and then some) can be lost in a heartbeat.
Please be careful.
Quote from dagnyt:
Mark
Quote from sebastionay:
Are there live contests with options on demo or real that I can look at?