So you just pull straight from your account April/June/September/January based on how you did in that previous quarter?jayelbee said:
Keep investing it. No reason to pull it out of the market until it's due.
So you just pull straight from your account April/June/September/January based on how you did in that previous quarter?jayelbee said:
Keep investing it. No reason to pull it out of the market until it's due.
oldarmy1 said:
AAPL hasn't done anything yet. Feb 19th should be fine to get the move to where the original options targets were.
WWR - I am laughing at you guys scrambling on covered calls.
BREwmaster said:
I don't have the tweets handy, but some of the elliot wave guys are going ****oo for TSLA at the moment. I need to save some ammo for it! I think $1100+ was mentioned as a target, oomph!
Colt98 said:
Since its night time and things are a little slower I have a question. What do some of you guys do when you want to take a day off from your trades. It seems since I've started trading more I have my phone with me 24/7 during the week regardless where I am. Vacation, fishing, hunting, ball games..... I never fill like I can get out of some trades to just put the phone away. Some of you guys that may make 5 figure gains+ per week, how do you manage your off time during trading days. If you want to leave for a week. How do you manage that. Do you just close out all your short term trades and let the rest role? Up you hedges?
One more.... With all the short term gains(taxable accts), how do you treat your taxes. Do you take money out weekly, quarterly...Let it ride till tax day? Do you sit it in savings, bond ETF's? I know the last year has been some of the greatest times in the markets for me, and the gains have been pretty significant(granted I was working out of a pretty good hole I made myself the year before). I feel like I have finally found the balance I need in my account, trading 70% options wasn't the way to go for me with my schedule.
HouAg12 said:
ASO has been a killer stock for me since IPO, I know others on the board have held as well.
TD is telling me short interest is 43% of float....seems super high? Worth trimming some winnings?
Morning.HouAg12 said:HouAg12 said:
ASO has been a killer stock for me since IPO, I know others on the board have held as well.
TD is telling me short interest is 43% of float....seems super high? Worth trimming some winnings?
Bump as this got lost in the appl noise a few days ago
gig em 02 said:
MGNI up 8%, and I'm the dummy that sold to go net free!
irish pete ag06 said:
So I switched my account in Fidelity to margin and nowhere doesn't show the cost basis for 2 of my holdings.
When I go down and read by the #2 note at the bottom it says it's not available and will show up the next day... but it's been a coupe days and still doesn't show. It's doing this for more than just this ticker.
Anyone know why it does this?
Quote:
As you will see from our detailed, point-by-point response to the short seller firm's questions, the alleged "report" is rife with ad-hominem attacks, sweeping inaccuracies and gross mischaracterizations. Importantly, the short seller firm did not contact Clover, and we had no knowledge of the short seller report prior to it being made publicly available. In our view, it belies a desperate attempt for publicity while sacrificing any regard for the truth.
In addition, we would note that the report's title specifically calls out the involvement of "The King of SPACs," Chamath Palihapitiya, and accuses him of a dearth of diligence. This, as we will show, is completely untrue, and we suspect this was done in order to sensationalize what is otherwise a rather underwhelming piece of research. Given the market's latest views on short sellers, we believe that Hindenburg, which takes pains to call out their altruism in saying that they are not short on CLOV stock, is foolheartedly seeking to redeem itself by posturing as a white knight of the financial markets.
Sell covered calls into strength. Premiums rise into strength and decline into the bottom.tsuag10 said:
Question on strategy for selling covered calls:
Is it best to try and sell calls when the share price is nearing the top of a price channel? Or does it really matter if you're planning to keep rolling them up and out on a regular basis?
FJ43 said:Sell covered calls into strength. Premiums rise into strength and decline into the bottom.tsuag10 said:
Question on strategy for selling covered calls:
Is it best to try and sell calls when the share price is nearing the top of a price channel? Or does it really matter if you're planning to keep rolling them up and out on a regular basis?