um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
my annual travel spend exceeds $100K. It's been $0 for 5 months.59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
the broker handles closing both sides at expiration. I've never had an issue in a margin account getting ITM spreads closed.McInnis 03 said:
So here's a tricky one.
Broker: TDA
Question: When playing vertical spreads in a ROTH IRA, do you actually have to have the cash available to run through both sides of a vertical spread in the event you hold it until expiration, or will the broker handle the transaction and leave you with the remainder?
IE: Bought a 101C on an equity, sold a 102C on an equity. Equity closes at 108 at time of expiration. Does the person have to have $10,100 cash available to purchase the 100 shares at 101, and then they can receive $10,200 by the sale of said shares. Or does the broker simply handle the full transaction if you're liquidity doesn't support that transaction at the time?
Yeah mine is likely around there, all in with hotels and stuff. My best friend spends several hundred thousand per year just on airline tickets, and he has been $0 for 5 months with no plans to travel the remainder of the year.$30,000 Millionaire said:my annual travel spend exceeds $100K. It's been $0 for 5 months.59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
I would gladly pay for some attorney's vacations if they would just not bill their entire life on a work trip that could be accomplished remotely. The billable hours are the real killer, and everyone knows you aren't working at nearly 100% capacity on a plane.59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
I guess my question lies with the fact that it's a ROTH IRA and I'm not sure that margin is allowed to be utilized, but you'd think if the transaction isn't allowed, it wouldn't allow me to run the spread?Ragoo said:the broker handles closing both sides at expiration. I've never had an issue in a margin account getting ITM spreads closed.McInnis 03 said:
So here's a tricky one.
Broker: TDA
Question: When playing vertical spreads in a ROTH IRA, do you actually have to have the cash available to run through both sides of a vertical spread in the event you hold it until expiration, or will the broker handle the transaction and leave you with the remainder?
IE: Bought a 101C on an equity, sold a 102C on an equity. Equity closes at 108 at time of expiration. Does the person have to have $10,100 cash available to purchase the 100 shares at 101, and then they can receive $10,200 by the sale of said shares. Or does the broker simply handle the full transaction if you're liquidity doesn't support that transaction at the time?
Same-ish. $60K and 9-10 countries planned this year. I'm at $2K and don't forsee any business travel before the end of the year.$30,000 Millionaire said:my annual travel spend exceeds $100K. It's been $0 for 5 months.59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
margin is not allowed because of the contribution limits. On a margin call you can't just wire in cash so the broker blocks it.McInnis 03 said:I guess my question lies with the fact that it's a ROTH IRA and I'm not sure that margin is allowed to be utilized, but you'd think if the transaction isn't allowed, it wouldn't allow me to run the spread?Ragoo said:the broker handles closing both sides at expiration. I've never had an issue in a margin account getting ITM spreads closed.McInnis 03 said:
So here's a tricky one.
Broker: TDA
Question: When playing vertical spreads in a ROTH IRA, do you actually have to have the cash available to run through both sides of a vertical spread in the event you hold it until expiration, or will the broker handle the transaction and leave you with the remainder?
IE: Bought a 101C on an equity, sold a 102C on an equity. Equity closes at 108 at time of expiration. Does the person have to have $10,100 cash available to purchase the 100 shares at 101, and then they can receive $10,200 by the sale of said shares. Or does the broker simply handle the full transaction if you're liquidity doesn't support that transaction at the time?
this is awesome, I just opened a whole mess of theseMcInnis 03 said:If I am expecting an upwards move there are a few ways to do it, but in this situation I"m "buying" debit spreads.jsap said:How do you setup call spread? Buy to open 101p and 102c?McInnis 03 said:
CRWD is on my radar as well. I'm consistently looking for daily charts that have been on the uptrend for awhile but have pulled back to the 8-21 day EMA. Well, CRWD has gone even harder, and has now 3 inside bars in a row on the hourly. That's quite a bit of consolidation.
EDIT: And like that I get into a few 101/102 call spreads for this week at .57
I buy the 101C and sell the 102C. This caps my gain at the difference in the strikes, meaning I can make $1 ($100) per contract assuming the price is above 102 at expiration. Or if the stock makes a good move for me early I can close the spread by selling the 101C and buying to cover the 102C.
I have been doing day or overnight trips since the end of May, averaging 1 trip per week. My travel has been cut roughly in half since restarting and was completely shutdown from mid-March to end of May.topher06 said:Yeah mine is likely around there, all in with hotels and stuff. My best friend spends several hundred thousand per year just on airline tickets, and he has been $0 for 5 months with no plans to travel the remainder of the year.$30,000 Millionaire said:my annual travel spend exceeds $100K. It's been $0 for 5 months.59 South said:
um cough cough, don't forget all the miles used for free vacations and the subsequent travel 'status' weiner measuring competitions over extravagant dinners, all expensed of course.
These are all just anecdotes, but does anyone have an anecdote of a regular traveler who is still regularly traveling? Has relatively firm plans to return to traveling in 2020 (at least refundable tickets booked)?
Please make sure that if you're going to be executing spreads you read up on them, understand the risks of early assignment, and pretty much know what you're doing in any situation you put yourself into.NRD09 said:this is awesome, I just opened a whole mess of theseMcInnis 03 said:If I am expecting an upwards move there are a few ways to do it, but in this situation I"m "buying" debit spreads.jsap said:How do you setup call spread? Buy to open 101p and 102c?McInnis 03 said:
CRWD is on my radar as well. I'm consistently looking for daily charts that have been on the uptrend for awhile but have pulled back to the 8-21 day EMA. Well, CRWD has gone even harder, and has now 3 inside bars in a row on the hourly. That's quite a bit of consolidation.
EDIT: And like that I get into a few 101/102 call spreads for this week at .57
I buy the 101C and sell the 102C. This caps my gain at the difference in the strikes, meaning I can make $1 ($100) per contract assuming the price is above 102 at expiration. Or if the stock makes a good move for me early I can close the spread by selling the 101C and buying to cover the 102C.
maroon19 said:
Can someone explain why LUV's stock price keeps rising? I see no reason behind it and as many of you have mentioned, y'all are not flying anymore.
I'll take "Stonks that do not only go up" for $1000 Alex.AgShaun00 said:
CX got upgrade from credit suisse to 3.7
we can't use it under 2.5Square Pair said:
Using name jinx that stonk.
only thing I need to worry about is allowing it to expire between my strikes and getting exercised, right? Or am I missing something?McInnis 03 said:Please make sure that if you're going to be executing spreads you read up on them, understand the risks of early assignment, and pretty much know what you're doing in any situation you put yourself into.NRD09 said:this is awesome, I just opened a whole mess of theseMcInnis 03 said:If I am expecting an upwards move there are a few ways to do it, but in this situation I"m "buying" debit spreads.jsap said:How do you setup call spread? Buy to open 101p and 102c?McInnis 03 said:
CRWD is on my radar as well. I'm consistently looking for daily charts that have been on the uptrend for awhile but have pulled back to the 8-21 day EMA. Well, CRWD has gone even harder, and has now 3 inside bars in a row on the hourly. That's quite a bit of consolidation.
EDIT: And like that I get into a few 101/102 call spreads for this week at .57
I buy the 101C and sell the 102C. This caps my gain at the difference in the strikes, meaning I can make $1 ($100) per contract assuming the price is above 102 at expiration. Or if the stock makes a good move for me early I can close the spread by selling the 101C and buying to cover the 102C.
AAL and UAL are up a higher % today than LUV so a strong day for the airlines it seems (not sure driver outside of they're all beaten down and they will have some good days)maroon19 said:
so its rising because other airlines are in a worse position moving forward? I know LUV has the strongest balance sheet out of the major airlines and are mainly domestic so that all makes sense to me. I figured they would be slumping in the high twenty-low thirty range rather than keep rising though
On debit spreads, yeah, you're pretty much protected with most things. If you start to sell them you can run afoul unless you set cash aside, but yeah, you pretty much got it so far.NRD09 said:only thing I need to worry about is allowing it to expire between my strikes and getting exercised, right? Or am I missing something?McInnis 03 said:Please make sure that if you're going to be executing spreads you read up on them, understand the risks of early assignment, and pretty much know what you're doing in any situation you put yourself into.NRD09 said:this is awesome, I just opened a whole mess of theseMcInnis 03 said:If I am expecting an upwards move there are a few ways to do it, but in this situation I"m "buying" debit spreads.jsap said:How do you setup call spread? Buy to open 101p and 102c?McInnis 03 said:
CRWD is on my radar as well. I'm consistently looking for daily charts that have been on the uptrend for awhile but have pulled back to the 8-21 day EMA. Well, CRWD has gone even harder, and has now 3 inside bars in a row on the hourly. That's quite a bit of consolidation.
EDIT: And like that I get into a few 101/102 call spreads for this week at .57
I buy the 101C and sell the 102C. This caps my gain at the difference in the strikes, meaning I can make $1 ($100) per contract assuming the price is above 102 at expiration. Or if the stock makes a good move for me early I can close the spread by selling the 101C and buying to cover the 102C.
I guess if Moderna said they have a vaccine, we are going to have another round of all the big pharmas saying they have a vaccine so they don't get left behind. Going to take all of this with a grain of salt, feels like the pharmas are trying to pump their share price.Boat Shoes said:McInnis 03 said:
Riley, thoughts ?
Anyone see any action in the call options?
i would t worry too much. The brokerage is going to execute the closing transactions at expiration. If you let them expire the cash settle may take a little longer then closing outright yourself.NRD09 said:only thing I need to worry about is allowing it to expire between my strikes and getting exercised, right? Or am I missing something?McInnis 03 said:Please make sure that if you're going to be executing spreads you read up on them, understand the risks of early assignment, and pretty much know what you're doing in any situation you put yourself into.NRD09 said:this is awesome, I just opened a whole mess of theseMcInnis 03 said:If I am expecting an upwards move there are a few ways to do it, but in this situation I"m "buying" debit spreads.jsap said:How do you setup call spread? Buy to open 101p and 102c?McInnis 03 said:
CRWD is on my radar as well. I'm consistently looking for daily charts that have been on the uptrend for awhile but have pulled back to the 8-21 day EMA. Well, CRWD has gone even harder, and has now 3 inside bars in a row on the hourly. That's quite a bit of consolidation.
EDIT: And like that I get into a few 101/102 call spreads for this week at .57
I buy the 101C and sell the 102C. This caps my gain at the difference in the strikes, meaning I can make $1 ($100) per contract assuming the price is above 102 at expiration. Or if the stock makes a good move for me early I can close the spread by selling the 101C and buying to cover the 102C.