i love this. i always wanted to be part of a conspiracy. now the truth can be told. mav and i are actually siamese twins. we also trade against each other so that we can honestly say that one of us is always profitable. now you all know the secret to positive expectancy.Quote from Deringer:
Dummy-variable is one of Maverick's other screennames. It's funny how the guy created screennames to respond to himself and pat his own back.
Quote from Maverick74:
I just think it's funny that Mike and I see things so much alike that we appear to be the same person. It's actually hysterical how these conspiracy theories come about on ET.
Quote from dummy-variable:
i love this. i always wanted to be part of a conspiracy. now the truth can be told. mav and i are actually siamese twins. we also trade against each other so that we can honestly say that one of us is always profitable. now you all know the secret to positive expectancy.

i guess this is possible but highly improbable. since +expectancy resides with the trader there is no reason that the selection process cannot be where the edge comes from. i've never met anyone that simply opened positions and held them to expiration with no adjustments and consistently delivered profits. this is the case of someone who regularly finds mispriced options and is able to capitalize on them. it's not really the sort of situation i've been discussing.Quote from fengshui-123:
If the skill trader can alter the odds" so to speak..., and to select those ripples..., then why he can't do it when he first entering the first leg to get the +expectancy?
if markets are efficient then the slippage and commissions are the only factors that make trading a negative expectancy event. that is why professionals are acutely aware of managing costs. driving down a commission by a nickel or so per contract translates into significant long term cash savings.By the way, bid/ask and commission added up with all other factors not necessary resulted in negative expectancy, they are just parts of the factors that have negative effect.
If options are not discrete events. they are not coin flips or other binary either/or situations, then it is meaningless to say that it has negative expectancy at the snapshot(ie. you entering the trade).
what a trader thinks is irrelevant to expectancy. i may buy a lottery ticket with the "expectation" that i will win. that doesn't change the true odds.Quote from fengshui-123:
[...] when a trader select a trade he always think he has +expectancy at that particular moment othetwise he should not put on.
efficiency is a function of markets not models.efficient or not is model dependance, no model no such thing.
Quote from dummy-variable:
a skilled trader has the ability to "alter the odds" so to speak by bringing individual options into combinations that, while on their own offer only negative expectancy, in combination they provide positive expectancy. it is in essence the TRADER'S skill that creates positive expectancy.
one way to maybe get a handle on how this operates is to "reverse engineer" a trade. when you buy a simple call if you track the life of the value of that call from the moment you bought or sold it you can see in retrospect that there would have been several times that the trade would have been profitable or at worst a situation where it would have shown the least loss.
but the skilled trader - through deep experience - learns to select those ripples in an option's history that either result in reduced losses or better than average gains.
If you can explain how that can be done PRIOR to a favourable move in the underlying I'll eat my hat (literally in front of you) !Quote from dummy-variable:
a skilled trader has the ability to "alter the odds" so to speak by bringing individual options into combinations that, while on their own offer only negative expectancy, in combination they provide positive expectancy. it is in essence the TRADER'S skill that creates positive expectancy.