Quote from The Oracle:
she is carrying 5 actually..one for each member of TFF..as we all like to share
as for options..main diff with european is no assignment until expiry..handy if u are selling options to take in premium..but selling can be a lot more risky..so u have to cover ur risk by limiting ur profit potential..like all trading..different times call for different strategies..use the one that has the most likely chance of big profit for small risk..if it looks that way..if not..then just go for bread and butter trading..and wait until the big chances present themselves..as they will..that is for sure..or better again..use both..but be careful not to overtrade and risk too much..as the outcome can be determined by one simple news statement
TO
Yes, the assignment difference I knew about - not the settlement price

. Remembering my days of options buying/selling, assignment was never really my concern. An OTM assignment doesn't happen (if it does, some idiot just gave you free premium). An ITM assignment can happen (and happened to me) but that just says bad trade management! Even then you get some premium early and then turn around, cover, and sell more premium
Some risk can be managed by way of spreads (vertical or calendar). In fact one of my strategy was to buy OTM leaps on a good but slow moving stock and sell front month ATM options against it. A good slow accumulation of premium and you roll it all forward or backward if the underlying moves substantially. But that was still a lot of headache and not much reward for my taste.
Now that you have opened my eyes some more - esp risk management, I see that you can trade whatever market as long as you are in control of #1
Reflecting back I already see lots of errors I made (combined with my stubbornness and not having clear targets).
Now I want to try the bread and butter trading. I really like the idea of going flat by EOD (or mostly flat). No overnight risk and Angela throwing a bucket of cold water after serving too many beers
Small steps first.
Famous quote - "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step."
