I've recently subscribed to elitetrader and I've just read this thread. I am very much a newbie Options Trader. After ~ 18mths I categorise myself as consciously incompetent.
We are fairly restricted in Australia. We can trade options with a local broker on the local market and pay ~ USD17 per leg. The liquidity is low on the ASX and the underlying prices are also low - our largest bank trades for around USD54. I've chosen IB and to trade Options on the US market. In our winter the NYSE closes at 6am our time. (Our summer is better when the NYSE closes at 8am our time).
The main theme of this Thread is called the Wheel Strategy on r/options. I've been trading the Wheel for just over six months. I like this strategy:
- It's easy to understand and to manage.
- It can be classified as a system (someone referred to Deming in a previous post).
- Apart from unforeseen catastrophes in the market, the risk is easy to determine and manage. If a company like MSFT went belly-up the world economy would be wrecked so I don't worry about a stock going to zero.
- The Wheel strategy is well documented.
- So far I'm doing OK.
I don't trade on margin. I trade CSPs and CCs - mostly. Sometimes I get carried away watching TastyTrade and I will try a complex trade but I find them more difficult to manage.
I'm now working on becoming Consciously Competent so I'm building a Trading Journal using Filemaker Pro (I'm a Mac user) and the IB API. At the moment I'm concerned about being over-exposed so I need to bring that under control.
An aspect that is not often mentioned is becoming competent in 'your' trading platform. For example, there are still many aspects of the IB platform that I don't use/know about/understand.
Finally, are there any other 'systematic' approaches to option trading that are worth looking into?