anyone having issues with fidelity active trader pro?
Shundere said:
Quick question. I had bought some SPY Puts the other day. Looking to take the small profit and get out, but when I got to close the order, it says max loss is infinite. I don't feel like I have seen it say this before so am scared to submit. I am using TD
Make sure you're doing "sell to close". I'm assuming you may have "sell to open" selected or something.Shundere said:
Quick question. I had bought some SPY Puts the other day. Looking to take the small profit and get out, but when I got to close the order, it says max loss is infinite. I don't feel like I have seen it say this before so am scared to submit. I am using TD
If you have the long put in your portfolio, you want to "sell to close" that position.Shundere said:
Quick question. I had bought some SPY Puts the other day. Looking to take the small profit and get out, but when I got to close the order, it says max loss is infinite. I don't feel like I have seen it say this before so am scared to submit. I am using TD
Are you sure they are PUTS? And, are you sure you BOUGHT them? B/c for any option that you buy CALL or PUT, the maximum loss is the premium you paid.McInnis 03 said:If you have the long put in your portfolio, you want to "sell to close" that position.Shundere said:
Quick question. I had bought some SPY Puts the other day. Looking to take the small profit and get out, but when I got to close the order, it says max loss is infinite. I don't feel like I have seen it say this before so am scared to submit. I am using TD
This all depends on your strategy. Perhaps your happy with the liquid infusion you'll get from being called. Perhaps you'd rather keep the stock and you need to take the loss to buy them back. This is all up to you and your strategy.gougler08 said:
So theoretical question here...I sold covered calls a few weeks back and they will be called out Friday (pending something crazy), should I buy to close them for a loss and then roll them further out or should I just let them get called out and then if stock price comes down over coming weeks, rebuy as a long position?
That depends entirely on whether you're bullish long term or just want to milk premiums. I have a dark cloud over my head, so every time I've bought a call back at a loss, the underlying stock inevitably drops and I regret that choice. So I choose to just milk premiums and leave well enough alone.gougler08 said:
So theoretical question here...I sold covered calls a few weeks back and they will be called out Friday (pending something crazy), should I buy to close them for a loss and then roll them further out or should I just let them get called out and then if stock price comes down over coming weeks, rebuy as a long position?
Are you closing the actual position, or are you going through the "TRADES" page and then selecting the identical position to SELL? B/c if the latter, my guess would be that you have mixed up either the strike, the date, or both.Shundere said:
When I bought them, the max loss was what I paid for them. Now when i go to close the order, it says max loss and has a large number. Which scared me from submitting because I felt as if I had done something wrong in the first place.
gougler08 said:
So theoretical question here...I sold covered calls a few weeks back and they will be called out Friday (pending something crazy), should I buy to close them for a loss and then roll them further out or should I just let them get called out and then if stock price comes down over coming weeks, rebuy as a long position?
Yeah I know how they work...was more around the strategy of should I "buy to close" early and take a loss since premiums are higher now, or just let it be exercised on Friday and then potentially rebuy the stock if it comes back downBocephus said:gougler08 said:
So theoretical question here...I sold covered calls a few weeks back and they will be called out Friday (pending something crazy), should I buy to close them for a loss and then roll them further out or should I just let them get called out and then if stock price comes down over coming weeks, rebuy as a long position?
When you set up your call, you should set the option as "sell to open." Then you get your premium and you wait until the strike date. The person who purchase your call has until the strike date to exercise. Either he does and you make the profit of the premium plus the difference between your purchase price and the strike price, or he doesn't and you can sell another call for the next month.
No worries! Good to have confirmation that I'm doing things right as I'm still a relative noobie to many on hereBocephus said:
Okay, now your post makes complete sense to me. My bad.
You could always turn around the next week and sell puts on the stock if you really like it and want to own it.gougler08 said:
Thanks guys...this is what I was thinking as well so probably will just get called out and have the cash on hand for a retest (whether I buy that stock back or a different one, not sure yet)
Yeah I think best case would be that we retest after 30 days...but I'm highly doubtful that's the case. If we get down to the 220/230 SPY level soon I may rebuy even though I wouldn't get the loss due to the wash sale rulePrognightmare said:
Yeah, let it be called out and reload. Check to make sure that you have to stay out of that stock for 30 days and then you'll get the tax benefit for the minor hickey.
He's fishing today, not sure how in the forums he'll be. I want to say he loaded up at like 58, i'll search post history.HoustonAg_2009 said:
OA - When should we re-enter WYNN?