lighten up.
Unless blue in your color wheel - don't hold your breath
VTS is making a serious point. try to grasp it.
Defending a shill - interesting
RN
lighten up.
VTS is making a serious point. try to grasp it.
They all worked, but then my gains get wiped out by losing trades.
I'm thinking about buying an ETF and sticking with covered calls and similar strategies.
I for one appreciate your post and excellent advices as they summarized the painful experiences I accumulated over the past 3-4 yrs of trading options. Most of my losing trades were because of #3, #4, #5 and #9. I wasn't patience enough, either got in too early or got our too soon. I found out that mechanical trading (e.g. #5, buy/sell every period based on a "formula" like probability) did not work and trading index options did not work.
- If the market environment or context is not producing good results and you're certain it's not your methods, stop trading - the market is not conducive to your methodology. Accept it and be patient. Recognize that the current market is in a period of uncertainty in ways and violent moves up and down are to be expected. It's volatile and not always a "good" kind of volatile.
- If you don't have any risk parameters or make them up as you go, stop doing that and make a plan.
- If you're bailing too early because you're worried about losing money rather than obeying your risk parameters you're hawking your P/L too much and focusing too much on money.
- If you're bailing too late because you're getting greedy or fantasizing about all the money you could make on this trade if it only went to xyz you're stepping outside the parameters of the trade and thinking too much about money.
- If you're doing stuff like selling OTM options (naked, iron condors, etc) and just hoping, based on "probability", that price won't go near your strike - then you're a slave to gamma and will get screwed eventually. These strategies don't really work IMO, get closer to the money and learn how to hedge with the underlying when necessary. If your size is so large, just to produce a substantial concern, vs your account size, that you couldn't even hedge, then it's only a matter of time until a blow up happens.
- Don't screw around with earnings.
- Possibly don't even screw around with individual stocks if that's what you're doing, instead trade index options.
- If you're making trades because you just want to trade and not because there's any significant setup, stop doing that.
- Patience.
. Perhaps, I have not been doing it long enough and will get "wipe out" one of these days.yesOP. Took me a while to grasp this, but as a small retail trader, you will never be able to profit from the small picture unless you understand the bigger picture. The experienced traders in here know exactly what I'm talking about
drcha,The expected value of most options trades is approximately zero. I would expect that over the long term, the trader who cannot predict anything would make zero. You need to be able to make enough accurate guesses about direction or volatility. You cannot just blindly put on trades and wait for time to pass. So work on a method that can successfully predict movement of indexes, stocks, futures, or whatever you want. Then use options to leverage it.
A lot of wisdoms in this short reply. However, easier said than done.
drcha,
A lot of wisdoms in this short reply. However, easier said than done.
What is your opinion on all those published technical indicators (including Ichimoku) and their predictive values?
Regards,
Could you further explain this point? (Much appreciated if you do).OP. Took me a while to grasp this, but as a small retail trader, you will never be able to profit from the small picture unless you understand the bigger picture. The experienced traders in here know exactly what I'm talking about