Stock option are a piece of BS!

yesterday a placed bought 40 July 21 0.15
put and the stock did begin to fall but as it fell I still lost money now the put is down to 0.05. What did I do wrong? NO JOKES
 
Quote from pjmalcolm1:

yesterday a placed bought 40 July 21 0.15
put and the stock did begin to fall but as it fell I still lost money now the put is down to 0.05. What did I do wrong? NO JOKES
Without knowing any of the details, it sounds as if you bought some cheap otm puts with not much time left to expiry. Iow time decay works against you and you probably paid too much when you bought them (wide bid ask spread?). Add to that a small drop in volatility (?) and you've got the reason why they didn't increase in value despite a drop in the underlying. Note that the further otm your options are (low delta) the bigger a drop in the stock you need to make a profit. And the drop has to be fast (to offset your negative theta) and big (to offset your low delta). Read natenberg to get a basic understanding on how options are priced.
Cheers
db
 
Quote from pjmalcolm1:

Stock option are a piece of BS! yesterday a placed bought 40 July 21 0.15 put, NO JOKES

you no make good wisdom trades. Long puts bringing faster increases to acount ledger. BE GOOD SMART!
 
Quote from pjmalcolm1:

What did I do wrong? NO JOKES

You made a trade without understanding the risks of the instrument you were trading. That is what you did wrong, no joke. The document "Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options", published by the OCC here, is required reading for every US options investor prior to being granted options trading capability. Since it is clear that you have not read this short document, I have quoted the first risk characteristic of option holders here for your benefit:

RISKS OF OPTION HOLDERS
1. An option holder runs the risk of losing the entire amount paid for the option in a relatively short period of time. This risk reflects the nature of an option as a wasting asset which becomes worthless when it expires. An option holder who neither sells his option in the secondary market nor exercises it prior to its expiration will necessarily lose his entire investment in the option. (As noted in Chapter VIII, many brokerage firms have procedures for the exercise of options at expiration that are then in the money by a specified amount.) The fact that options become valueless upon expiration means that an option holder must not only be right about the direction of an anticipated price change in the underlying interest, but he must also be right about when the price change will occur. If the price of the underlying interest does not change in the anticipated direction before the option expires to an extent sufficient to cover the cost of the option, the investor may lose all or a significant part of his investment in the Page 42 option. This contrasts with an investor who purchases the underlying interest directly and may continue to hold his investment, notwithstanding its failure to change in price as anticipated, in the hope of waiting out an adverse price move and eventually realizing a profit.

I hope that helps.

-segv
 
It happens to me too buddie, the stock goes the same direction as my options position and the stock almost valued worthless (around 0.05-0.1).

It's because the options expiry is too close to expiration and the time decay accelerate faster.
 
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