Quote from OldTrader:
Premium selling as an ongoing strategy is a losing strategy in the end. You're going to have a series of small wins, and a few large losses that wipe out all your wins. History is replete with guys going broke with this strategy, guys with more experience and more capital.
If you try to implement a strategy where you take a loss on a movement against you, it will also cause you to close out positions which would have ended favorably.
In my 40+ years of trading, I have never seen a successful premium seller. If there was one, he was well hidden. In fact, the only successful option traders in general I have seen were market makers. And their strategies were considerably more complicated than anything as simple as premium selling.
The people that I know who have used options successfully are those who had an idea about the direction of the stock or index, and then implemented an option strategy to take advance of their expected price movement of the stock.
OldTrader
Quote from LTD4U:
Do you mean NAKED? Or do you include all net premium sellers like income strategies?
To me selling options is the only profitable strategy in the long term.
This is a lot of gibburish. I think you're yanking our chains. You need to post actual positions not B/B1 stuff.Quote from fbirdien:
I created a chart that depicts in detail what caused the problem. Well to summarize it , 3 adjustment in a month killed me . However next day after I wrote the first post I did some adjustment to reduce the loss to 19 %. Will know the outcome this Friday. I know that B2 is a risky venture as well but I had to do that this month.
Closed B due to sudden up-spike in VIX in short span. I kind of followed the cut loses approach and managed to eat 15 % loss. Then to offset it entered B1 that turned against me due to sudden down-spike in VIX. So closed B1 shortly after entry.
There was slight difference while closing B and closing B1. I waited little longer to close B1 (per the quote in item 5)
Now that I look back , while entering B1 adjustment, I had 3 choices-
1. Make bearish side adjustment (for credit) on the same day.
2. Make bullish adjustment on the same day.
3. Wait a day or two and then make a bearish or bullish adjustment.
Quote from TraderSU:
Cover CALL == Naked Short PUT
So, naked or not, options writers almost always have bigger risk/reward ratio than options buyer. And their single loss can easily wipe many winnings.
Curious how you have a risk/reward ratio of 1/1 with a higher probability of reward ...Quote from mike007:
I think that many ppl have the wrong or misguided information on what premium sellers are. I dont even know, but when ppl ask me how I trade, i dont tell them i am a premium seller. I tell them i am a option spreader.
Not in ref. to CC, but I can sell options in a spread have have less risk than buying naked options with higher probabilities. Risk 1 to make 1.