Anyone who wears a Mensa tie around has got some issues. Making a broad based conclusion based on your experience with the dude, also probably indicative of something. There are some "gut feel" guys trading their own money, probability says at least a few will be successful. A couple made it to hedge fund level, most have subsequently blown up. And the vast majority of money is traded by professionals, the kind who yes, can quote BS off the top of their head because it's a very basic and very fundamental concept of their profession and they're professionals.I have to laugh because I have those same awful memories...hardly remember my really good trades, only the really bad ones. And I couldn't stand the other traders who would insist on trying to sell you more where you just bought them. But looking back I should have doing the same thing as them.
"Options may be about math, but there is a reason quants make sucky traders."
I trained under a guy who was a physics/econ double major from U. of Chicago. He was also a member of the Mensa club. He used to wear his Mensa club tie on the floor everyday. Bragged about how much smarter he was than everyone, condescending as all hell. Really knew his options theory, and he could recite the Black-Scholes equation at the top of his head. And guess what? He was the worst trader I've ever seen. He over-analyzed every little trade he did to death, suffered from chronic analysis paralysis. After every trade he would step outside the pit, his hands shaking and his brow dripping with sweat, and try and come up with every possible scenario how he might lose money. Then he would run back in the pit and immediately try to get out of it. It was both comical and sad to watch. He didn't last 6 months in the business.
Anyone who wears a Mensa tie around has got some issues. Making a broad based conclusion based on your experience with the dude, also probably indicative of something. There are some "gut feel" guys trading their own money, probability says at least a few will be successful. A couple made it to hedge fund level, most have subsequently blown up. And the vast majority of money is traded by professionals, the kind who yes, can quote BS off the top of their head because it's a very basic and very fundamental concept of their profession and they're professionals.
Sure, try https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID1573111_code863755.pdf?abstractid=1013421&mirid=1 and a little more orthogonal but a seminal study none the lessInteresting generalization you have concluded about who makes it and who doesn't in this business. You wouldn't happen to have any quantitative support of this notion? If so would love to read up on it.
Interesting metric of success. You concern is touching, but no need to worry. I enjoy get togethers with my friends and neighbors and only go to parties if putting on a tux is absolutely necessary. Besides weddings which I generally enjoy, I've managed to avoid that nonsense for nearly a decade now thank goodness.You don't get invited to a lot of parties, do you Sig?
Even in Kansas, if you look at the horizon, it is still slightly curved, not a straight line.As for flat earth. Ever been to Kansas? End of argument!

If I may revive an old thread (as I start to better understand what was communicated within it ha):Need to point out something important to you. When you look at the IV skew of the strikes, the shortest months almost always look steeper and more negatively skewed, which often times is the case. But when you compare the IVs of the deltas or standard deviation points across all months on the term structure, often times they are the same or even steeper in the further out maturities. Here are some examples:
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These were taken live from a product I trade. Notice how the 1st month (purple line) IV puts skew based on delta are relatively the same as the other months. If this was an IV vs strike graph the 1st month skew would be much more pronounced. I don't ever graph or look at the skew based on strike or simple moneyness which most beginners do. It's like comparing apples to oranges. You need to adjust for the time factor between the different maturities. Comparing IVs of the same deltas or sigma points is much more relevant and what most sophisticated option trading desks do. So there you go.