You don’t always need a long to protect yourself. It’s a matter of knowing the probabilities and limiting the size of your positions. I do t buy Kong’s to protect my shorts. You have to know what you’re doing. Did I blow my account up earlier this month? Not at all. I’ve already recovered those losses. I love these people are are scared shirtless to sell naked options! I guess if everybody had the courage to do it, the edge might be gone. So keep buying options. I will keep selling them to you.QUOTE="ironchef, post: 4617102, member: 485947"]Why may I ask?[/QUOTE]Why may I ask?
With credit spreads, your probability of profit goes down, you incur additional commissions and fees, and your profits will decrease. If you’re fine with that, go with it.Thank you everyone for your comments. Except you guys that are getting into some kind of pissing match. Probably the better bet is to put on credit spreads. That way if the underlying moves against me I’m protected.
Thank you everyone for your comments. Except you guys that are getting into some kind of pissing match. Probably the better bet is to put on credit spreads. That way if the underlying moves against me I’m protected.
I am new to options but I bag to disagree, on the pissing match part. I enjoyed reading all the different opinions and frankly if you carefully study them, they all have merits. If it were me, I would study all of the arguments, take what I need and discard what I don't, from all sides.Thank you everyone for your comments. Except you guys that are getting into some kind of pissing match. Probably the better bet is to put on credit spreads. That way if the underlying moves against me I’m protected.
You don’t always need a long to protect yourself. It’s a matter of knowing the probabilities and limiting the size of your positions.
And I will keep buying them.I guess if everybody had the courage to do it, the edge might be gone. So keep buying options. I will keep selling them to you.


The options chain gives you the probabilities. If I sell a 10 delta strangle, I have in excess of a 90% probability of profit. If I manage my winner at 50% of the maximum profit, I give myself around 98% probability of making a profit. Now, that 2% can be a big loser. So far this year, my trades are 94.4% profitable.Very well said.![]()
I do understand the limiting the size part, but how do you determine if the probability is for or against you when in general the market is efficient, i.e., buyers and sellers are both knowledgeable experts in option pricing?
Thank you and regards,
And I will keep buying them.
But I am also on your side, I do go short and often, I might add.![]()
When I looked at the performance of hedge funds, actively managed mutual funds, most of them don't do any better than passive funds, so those managers really don't have a "winning formula" to share, they are just asset accumulators living off fees.
Best wishes to all.