Quote from Cache Landing:
New software update includes a lot of stuff. Check out the e-mail that you should've received yesterday.
{edit} In short, it allows you to tie a ticker to multiple functions so that you can jump from one ticker to another without having to enter the ticker on each different page. IOW, you can link AAPL to the red tab and when you click it, you should be able to jump from the trade tab, to the analyze, to the charts, and AAPl will be displayed in all of them.
Quote from andysmith:
Rally,
So you're saying that some benchmarks need to be established, such as 10-pt spread, 27 days to exp, 60 pts OTM,... should give $xyz credit?
Quote from rallymode:
I dont want to be the black sheep of the thread but it sounds like many people on this thread use too much discretion when it comes to entries and credit sought. What i mean by that is, once you see the credit you seek you put more weight to the credit "collected" and less weight to its relation to the underlying and time to expiration.
You guys probably dont see it now but if you measure your results over a 12-24 month period you will probably do alot better if you systemize your entries based on optimal credit as it relates to the current price and time to expiration for the max risk at hand.
An example of what i am talking about is this:
You could've gotten that same credit at half the risk just 5 days ago.
I hope i am not offending anyone with this statement but its an observation that has bothered me for some time now. Afterall, it's your money.
Quote from rallymode:
Yes, since we are talking about using SPX credit spreads here to bring in income consitently month after month. It is my impression that this what people here are doing and that's who my comment was addressed at.
If your goal is to consistently bring in income month after month, it only makes sense to try and systemize your entries and stick to it. The less discretion(outside of discretion allowed by your system) the better. So if you are going to systemize your entries then you must consider the credit received vs the risk at hand, and the strike selection as it relates to the market price. Lastly, but not least, your position size which should be consistent with your max risk per trade .
I am not advocating people follow what i do. Whether you go ATM, OTM or FOTM, an optimal entry does exist when you factor in all these variables which if followed will give you consistency and in my opinion significantly reduce your risk over the long haul. I see very little of that in this thread when you consider the large amount of risk thats being undertaken by most. People seem so in love with the credit they "collect" that they either overlook the other side of the equation or seriously under weigh its importance with regards to the consistency i am talking about.
I will end this with this comment - just because something works now doesnt mean it will always work. The longer it works, the closer you get to its END, What price are you paying to find out when that actually is?
Quote from Cache Landing:
Just a quick question for all you TOS fans out there. I find myself using the "probability of touching" function frequently, rather than the "probability of expiring".
While the premium for these credit spreads is based more on POE, it seems that the adjustment strategy for most on this thread is to adjust long before the short strike has been breached. In this case, I find the POT function to be much more helpful. What's everyone else's view on it?
Quote from Cache Landing:
Just a quick question for all you TOS fans out there. I find myself using the "probability of touching" function frequently, rather than the "probability of expiring".
While the premium for these credit spreads is based more on POE, it seems that the adjustment strategy for most on this thread is to adjust long before the short strike has been breached. In this case, I find the POT function to be much more helpful. What's everyone else's view on it?

Quote from ChrisM:
To make long story short I am enclosing this material.
There is no point to continue that discussion as it went into dead end (in my opinion), but whoever knows how to use valuable info properly may take advantage of enclosed article.