Gap fail this morning. It had bounced back and held Friday. 20k DOW likely test but with 3000 points of momentum rally there is lots of room for a momentum correction.
You are going to see a ton of twitter investors jump ship from Twitter and invest in SnapChat. Snap is a more attractive advertising vehicle than twitter for business. Take your loss and buy puts on Twitter, it is going to die a slow death.SheriffBarclay said:
So shortly after I buy snap puts a ton of analysts come out with buy recommendations.
What the ****.
Sounds like you never had a plan if price went against you and you didn't have/follow rules.aggiemetal said:
I used to do it a lot when I started b/c it looked promising, theoretically I could hit a homer and I knew my max loss going in, of course I almost never homered and almost always realized my max loss LOL
Back above BE in UNG a little over a month into trade. We will see.brd79 said:redsox34 said:
Its approaching channel support and a 30 RSI. looking to hold around 2 months.
Got in at 7.33
T&P's
huh? if you buy an option and price goes against you, you're toast...it's gotta go your way and pretty damn quickebdb_bnb said:Sounds like you never had a plan if price went against you and you didn't have/follow rules.aggiemetal said:
I used to do it a lot when I started b/c it looked promising, theoretically I could hit a homer and I knew my max loss going in, of course I almost never homered and almost always realized my max loss LOL
it's way up in this thread somewhereSheriffBarclay said:aggiemetal said:
careful on buying puts (or calls for that matter)...not only do you have to be right but you have to be right pretty damn quick or the theta decay will eat you alive (conversely is how I literally make my living but being short outright premium isn't for everyone and there are many other ways to skin a cat in this game)
I used to do it a lot when I started b/c it looked promising, theoretically I could hit a homer and I knew my max loss going in, of course I almost never homered and almost always realized my max loss LOL
I'm not saying that to tell you how to do your business, just a heads up for people following this thread looking to explore options...don't buy them, unless you are extremely good at tech analysis you don't know anything about direction, no one does....consider buying the stock and selling a call against (1 per 100 shares) or if bearish short selling the stock instead of buying puts, selling puts against so you at least have some probabilistic edge in one direction and you limit your loss if it goes agasint..... or if you are still dead set certain you know something, outright short or buy the stock at least you'll have all the time you want to be right
*unless you are just screwing around on a lotto ticket trade with really cheap crap
one of the Simpsons old intro's with Bart at the blackboard should be:
I won't buy options
I won't buy options
I won't buy options
I won't buy options
I won't buy options
I won't buy options
I don't mean this tone to be contentious, just my $0.02 having been there and pissed away a lot of money doing it FWIW. If you are great at timing markets and being right immediately, go nuts, you're a unicorn.
Thanks for the post..lots of info to dig through here. How do you make your living? Short outright premium? Not sure I follow.
I'd agree if you were buying otm weekly options, otherwise pretty damn quick doesn't apply.aggiemetal said:huh? if you buy an option and price goes against you, you're toast...it's gotta go your way and pretty damn quickebdb_bnb said:Sounds like you never had a plan if price went against you and you didn't have/follow rules.aggiemetal said:
I used to do it a lot when I started b/c it looked promising, theoretically I could hit a homer and I knew my max loss going in, of course I almost never homered and almost always realized my max loss LOL
yeah you've gotta be a TA guy to have a chance at it, I learned early that game wasn't happening for me (not saying it doesn't for others, my mentor is really good on that end but I couldn't trade his style so I morphed into another direction)...efficient market theory and the quant approach just works better for me and others who don't have to be right to consistently make good money...a few can do it (more power to you) but most traders aren't getting over that way (again I'm saying this with new guys in mind and my humble advice directing their efforts to using options to give them the edge in each trade)ebdb_bnb said:I'd agree if you were buying otm weekly options, otherwise pretty damn quick doesn't apply.aggiemetal said:huh? if you buy an option and price goes against you, you're toast...it's gotta go your way and pretty damn quickebdb_bnb said:Sounds like you never had a plan if price went against you and you didn't have/follow rules.aggiemetal said:
I used to do it a lot when I started b/c it looked promising, theoretically I could hit a homer and I knew my max loss going in, of course I almost never homered and almost always realized my max loss LOL
I think most people get in trouble when they play otm options with short expirations. Under that scenario, you would need price to move in your chosen direction and fast. I'm a TA guy that buys 2 weeks out. If I don't like the price movement, then I close at small loss, but I'm not toast by any stretch.
Aggiemetal- just want to say thanks for your insight! I signed up with tasty trade last week, and am just trying to soak up as much as I can. It's about like drinking from a firehose. Your strategy appeals to me, so I've been putting it into practice, mostly selling OTM calls and puts. This seems to eat up a lot of buying power though, so any recommendations on how to reduce that?aggiemetal said:
in event of an outlier move, i either aggressively scalp futures against my position or hit the sideline (again lose a battle not a war). . .I actually love those moves b/c while I may have lost some time and ROC (return on capital) I never lose overall, in fact I'm set up quite nice to reset with premium ridiculously far away from the current price
I like /ES b/c obviously it's essentially a general market index (not one stock that can do God knows what), the buying power on short /ES puts vs. a lot of other underlyings is realtively cheap and still offers really good premium far OTM, even when volatility isn't as high as I'd like, and it trades pretty much around the clock so if a big event happens I can adapt whenever (ie I was in a big AMZN strangle a few summers back when that big late Aug move happened, I knew overnight I was gonna get hammered and couldn't do anything about it--still through my process three weeks later I was ahead but still I never put myself in that spot again)Vito said:Aggiemetal- just want to say thanks for your insight! I signed up with tasty trade last week, and am just trying to soak up as much as I can. It's about like drinking from a firehose. Your strategy appeals to me, so I've been putting it into practice, mostly selling OTM calls and puts. This seems to eat up a lot of buying power though, so any recommendations on how to reduce that?aggiemetal said:
in event of an outlier move, i either aggressively scalp futures against my position or hit the sideline (again lose a battle not a war). . .I actually love those moves b/c while I may have lost some time and ROC (return on capital) I never lose overall, in fact I'm set up quite nice to reset with premium ridiculously far away from the current price
And would you mind expanding on the comment above? Say /ES is trading at 2350, and you sell 2150 puts, but an outlier move down occurs. How would you look to scalp against?
that's it more or less, just a cheap way to leverage and neutralize deltas when things start feeling like they might go sideways, or when they flat out do LOLGator2_01 said:
I'm no AggieMetal, but:
When you're selling OTM strangles on stocks, your notional value on that trade is 100 shares of the stock. Your BPR is ~20% of the strike price, so you're already working on 5:1 leverage - even if you're delta neutral on the trade. That is because if the price moves heavily against your position, there is the possibility of the losing side's delta going to 1.
You can lower your BPR by buying a further OTM call/put and turning the trade into an iron condor. By making the trade a defined risk you: lower your probability of profit, lower your max/targeted profit, and lower your ability to manage the trade when it moves against you.
You'd be better off looking for lower priced equities to trade than try to leverage up an SPY strangle.
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What he's probably doing when he scalps against a losing position:
Assume the trade started with /ES at 2350. He sold a May put on the /ES with a strike price of 2150. That put starts out with a delta of .05. As the /ES drops, the delta increases and you lose more and more. To scalp the future against that position you would sell /ES on the way down. Now the futures contract has a delta of 1, so it makes much more money on the way down than the short put loses; therefore he won't leave the short /ES position on long, just a couple points at a time to recoup losses from his short put.
awesome...yes it is, tastytrade is a wealth of info and sometimes hard to know where to startVito said:Aggiemetal- just want to say thanks for your insight! I signed up with tasty trade last week, and am just trying to soak up as much as I can. It's about like drinking from a firehose. Your strategy appeals to me, so I've been putting it into practice, mostly selling OTM calls and puts. This seems to eat up a lot of buying power though, so any recommendations on how to reduce that?aggiemetal said:
in event of an outlier move, i either aggressively scalp futures against my position or hit the sideline (again lose a battle not a war). . .I actually love those moves b/c while I may have lost some time and ROC (return on capital) I never lose overall, in fact I'm set up quite nice to reset with premium ridiculously far away from the current price
cool,if your BP is that limited I would diverge from my thing and suggest buying some crappy cheap OTM call/puts to lower BP, gives you room to wiggle and or sell more (essentially this would take it from a strangle to an Iron Condor) ...or of course not as far away long puts/calls to actually define your risk a bit ....nie thing about tastyworks is there dirt cheap commissions and zero closing costs, make it much easier to add these extra wings without it cutting into your profit margin as much (true gamechanger they've brought to the table)Comanche_Ag said:
This is very helpful. I appreciate you explaining all of this. I only have about $3k in my Tastyworks account as I'm learning, but I sold a few strangles yesterday on the high IV with my limited BP. Thanks!
Quote:
cool,if your BP is that limited I would diverge from my thing and suggest buying some crappy cheap OTM call/puts to lower BP, gives you room to wiggle and or sell more (essentially this would take it from a strangle to an Iron Condor) ...or of course not as far away long puts/calls to actually define your risk a bit
you take any profits on your puts side or was it worth it?Comanche_Ag said:
I went ahead and bought VXX calls/puts ~$1 out from my strangle positions. Thank you for your help and responses.