What does Karen the Supertrader and her results say about volatility? Oversold?

Step 3) Quit trading and transfer your money to someone with a brain. I could help you out with that if you like. Unlike our friend Karen here, I actually have third party audits of my results going back to 2005.

Like you?: http://elitetrader.com/vb/showpost.php?p=3950667&postcount=4

I find it hard to believe someone as abjectly ignorant as you would have the stones to solicit funds on here. Let's see that audit. I bet it's epic.

A "third party" audit you say? Audited by someone not hired by yourself but by an outside entity? Yeah lol, let's see this SEC audit. Did the CPA help you get out of that iron condor you were having so much trouble with?
 
Yes...if you are a retail trader...seriously,,, DON'T...trade SPX....trade the ES options, you can do Karen style on a micro scale ..greater flexability with 24 hr trading.

ES doesn't support a COB while SPX does support many complex orders. You can always hedge with ES. Comms are much higher with ES. <$8 r/t (or much lower in size) per fly in SPX, while the equivalent size in ES would be roughly double (or more). It all comes down to edge loss.
 
Yes...if you are a retail trader...seriously,,, DON'T...trade SPX....trade the ES options, you can do Karen style on a micro scale ..greater flexability with 24 hr trading.

SPX weekly options are more liquid then ES weekly options. Also, when ES options expire you get the future. When SPX options expire they settle for cash. I like SPX better, same tax treatment.

1245
 
First of all I don't consider either of you to be the average retail Joe, nor "new" or SLE..you all are more on a professional level with a great deal of experience. Its been a while since I've even looked at SPX weekly's. When they first came out they were not all that liquid.

The problem is simply margin. Essentially if you want to sell strangles or straddles like Karen then you (as a retail trader) flat out don't have the margin to do it on the SPX. If you (as a retail trader) are trying to close a wide condor under duress good luck with the SPX pit. True..... complicated orders can't be filled but one or two short puts and calls are easy to sell in the ES....and you can easily buy the farther out put or call if/when you need to. To each their own , there are advantages and disadvantages to every instrument and strategy........................the biggest however to the retail trader is MARGIN and unless you do have portfolio margin (and know how to use it) I would still advise to stay away from the SPX.
 
First of all I don't consider either of you to be the average retail Joe, nor "new" or SLE..you all are more on a professional level with a great deal of experience. Its been a while since I've even looked at SPX weekly's. When they first came out they were not all that liquid.

The problem is simply margin. Essentially if you want to sell strangles or straddles like Karen then you (as a retail trader) flat out don't have the margin to do it on the SPX. If you (as a retail trader) are trying to close a wide condor under duress good luck with the SPX pit. True..... complicated orders can't be filled but one or two short puts and calls are easy to sell in the ES....and you can easily buy the farther out put or call if/when you need to. To each their own , there are advantages and disadvantages to every instrument and strategy........................the biggest however to the retail trader is MARGIN and unless you do have portfolio margin (and know how to use it) I would still advise to stay away from the SPX.

The order book in ES is straddles/strangles, verts and calendars, IIRC. If you can fill (w/o nickel or penny granularity) near mid then you pick the one with the better fills. If you're going naked then you would want to be in ES.
 
How is that different from selling hurricane insurance, for example? Analyze the potential loss and size your trades accordingly - you might not be able to make 50% per year but you will be reasonably compensated for the assymetric P&L profile.

PS. I am pretty sure Karen is legit, but the story feels incomplete; maybe she gated investors or was able to raise extra etc. BTW, her fund is not in the SEC database, which rases some questions - like is she actually operating a number of segregated accounts and reports performance selectively.

Her fund is in the sec database. I believe it's hope investments. Her name is karen burton. Her fund had 95mm I think when I looked her up.
 
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