What Options book are you currently reading?

Risk Reward?? ROI???

The guy was a pit/floor trader..

$100 million in one day? It's humbling to meet a big, swinging dick, just when you thought you were the stuff.

Is that his Own, personal, wealth, bet...or does he represent a company, firm, brokerage or client?
Can you elaborate, specifically, what that trade involved...risk/reward? What kind of a return % ROI is that?
 
What did you think of Sinclair's book??

You can't lose reading an options book if you want to be an options trader. Almost all of them will have something you can synthesize into your current knowledge base.

When I started I read Hull and did all the math problems in it. It took me about 2 weeks while also working on a some stat arb strategies for the desk. I just finished most of Euan Sinclair's latest book.

After 20 years of trading vol (as a quant, market maker, flow trader, prop trader, and as a retail shlub), I'm still learning about options and about how they work. It's a journey, not a destination.
 
I really do not like to trade options so I can not give the suggestion about the books you read to learn options. Google can help you to find a good book.
 
This isn't a book, its a forum or something. It's helping me learn some stuff.
http://sp-finance.e-monsite.com/
It frequently links to this (e book?) by an actual quant.
https://bookdown.org/maxime_debellefroid/MyBook/all-about-volatility.html#implied-volatility
The guy doesn't fuck around. If I was better with options, I might be able to learn a lot from it -- most of it's going way over my head.
Theory is good to a point, but you can drown in it and never be profitable. Look at academics who are "experts" on derivatives but too scared to trade options in their accounts. Even some professionals at banks and other places have a deep understanding of derivatives but don't trade them.
 
The best trading book you will ever read....the one that makes the greatest impact on your actual profits....is.....your own trading journal.

Seriously. I've read literally hundreds of trading books over the last 3 decades and whilst they have been useful, they can give nothing more than the mechanics and theory behind the process. Most are fine for beginners - to understand what an iron condor is, what a butterfly trade looks like, but the transformation of that knowledge into actual, practical application is what is required to be a consistent trader.

Once I started doing a proper journal, I noticed my trading style change, my profitability increase and my stress levels reduce. I documented every trade, and was able to identify patterns in my behaviour and actions which were causing me to make big losses, or enter trades which I shouldn't have, or exited when I should have held etc. I started to identify common mistakes I was making - both in execution and judgement. I became more aware of my FOMO, my position sizing, and risk management.

The journal uses Excel sheets and Word docs, with text, graphics, back-test result, and recommendations for next time I'm in a similar situation.
 
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