why don''t people just sell options instead of trading minis?

You on about forex teacher, made my ignore list last night, posted a pdf or something a few days ago, defo!

Dear juliet

I know all about the failures /hypocrites selling education
can anybody post constructively , how do do it like a pro?

it is doable without getting hurt.

biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
WARNING WARNING STEALTH VENDOR ALERT! prepare for private messages offering free tutoring and help.

Thinks he is using "reverse psychology" by calling itself a BUYER when it is a seller.

Folks, we are dealing with a dangerous snake-- BEARWARE!

It takes a scammer to know a scammer.How did you know a scammer sends private messages, this is your deep guilty conscience?
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif
biggrin.gif


It takes one to know another

An executive coach explains how to learn in 2 days what normally takes 6 months
 
Last edited:
It would almost seem like instead of going long or short minis you should just sell a put/call instead...at least you get a nice cushion from the premium if you're wrong initially. the data shows 90% of traders fail, most regardless of duration. Peopel really suck at timing the market, on all time frames. having the premium work to your advantage should at least bump the odds a bit

May repeat some of prior answers, but:

1. Selling puts/calls, places a limit on profit;
2. Liquidity, and esp bid/ask spreads, are relatively high in options, and over time, take a toll;
3. Often when mkts make huge moves, the option markets virtually shut down, or the bid/ask spreads balloon, such that one would never trade. Futures, avoid this;
4. I don't think this key element mentioned yet: taxes
Stock options (all short term, on the short side,) are taxed at ordinary income rates, at say 35%. Futures have a blended rate, equal to 23%. So the tax rate is 50% higher in stocks/options, which means one needs to make 18% more trading stocks/stock options vs futures. That is an unnecessary hurdle, IMO.
 
May repeat some of prior answers, but:

1. Selling puts/calls, places a limit on profit;
2. Liquidity, and esp bid/ask spreads, are relatively high in options, and over time, take a toll;
3. Often when mkts make huge moves, the option markets virtually shut down, or the bid/ask spreads balloon, such that one would never trade. Futures, avoid this;
.

Options is a zero sum game .Options formula is used in most strategies. Using only the option formula , this is thinking only inside the box. Think outside the box and get a bigger edge.

1.Option spreads constructed intelligently create risk reward of 1 to 2.Options help in minimising/controlling risk
2.Trade most liquid options s and p etc
3.Most liquid markets are always liquid indices fx .The profits on liquid markets outweigh all costs , still low risk high rewards plus benefit of premium decay , premium decay is another edge.
4>Most books are written by failures who never profited from options trading , these is the knowledge limitation of the trader .The dumb educating the dumber.
 
If you want go short , sell put and sell futures/stock , if you want to get long sell call and long stock/futures , risk of choput is reduced .

The premium you receive will be about 3% for puts or calls on indices for 2 months , that 3 % gives you an edge /cushion , price has to go more than 3 % against you before you see loss .

If it goes > 3 % , you can sell second option to get 6% premium on options , if you are clever you get trade your way out of losses by further option trades .1 future /stock = 2 options .

You will find something profitable , if work hard on this , otherwise you will be with charlatans forever.

If you are smart enough , you will also find a strategy that makes 100% a year return , on futures and options.These smart traders are on their yachts not on E T.

Most people are sold the snake oil of price action , technical analysis , trends etc Your data confirms the value of these analyses, plus something else more important , this is hidden by all snake oil merchants and their accomplices.


What about bying 800 shares of QQQ selling short 1 NQ contract (as protection), will this be a neutral position?
If yes selling 8 call option OTM on QQQ will have very small risk?
 
May repeat some of prior answers, but:

1. Selling puts/calls, places a limit on profit;
2. Liquidity, and esp bid/ask spreads, are relatively high in options, and over time, take a toll;
3. Often when mkts make huge moves, the option markets virtually shut down, or the bid/ask spreads balloon, such that one would never trade. Futures, avoid this;
4. I don't think this key element mentioned yet: taxes
Stock options (all short term, on the short side,) are taxed at ordinary income rates, at say 35%. Futures have a blended rate, equal to 23%. So the tax rate is 50% higher in stocks/options, which means one needs to make 18% more trading stocks/stock options vs futures. That is an unnecessary hurdle, IMO.

SPX options are 1256 contracts so they are treated like futures for tax purposes.
 
Trading options is tricky but i agree traders have much better chance in generating decent profits from options more than just trading the underlying , although it wont be from just selling options , i would prefer buying options .
 
Trading options is tricky but i agree traders have much better chance in generating decent profits from options more than just trading the underlying , although it wont be from just selling options , i would prefer buying options .

you can use options selling to reduce your premium layout and premium cost , do some calculations
 
Back
Top