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24,765,621 Views | 233464 Replies | Last: 6 min ago by Heineken-Ashi
CC09LawAg
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What a world. This thing is gonna bounce around like crazy.

Tomorrow is going to be fun to watch.
Talon2DSO
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AG
Well....****
Chef Elko
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AG
What a comeback
Heineken-Ashi
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If that bottom holds, $138-$145 next top can still happen. Break $111 and uh oh for this market.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
CC09LawAg
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I think it is going to go up. If anything, to get one last squeeze for the overall market to ATH before they pull the rug out.

Just don't get the vibe that the big $$ screwed the little guy over enough just yet. There's got to be one more rabbit in the hat before the final pre-election crush.
RightWingConspirator
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AG
Good. I'll be adding more
"But it is easier to purchase products that denote superiority than to be actually superior in economic achievement." - Thomas J. Stanley
aggieland28
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AG
Thank you for the guidance. I'll elaborate on my story a bit. Started in early 2017 with around 2,700. First 4 stocks were CHK, AAPL, SONY, and JPM. Many different stocks along the way. I added to my portfolio as I acquired money, the bulk of which came from working summers. Really just held stocks for a while, watching from afar, making moves in terms of where stocks would be in years, not worrying about periods shorter than that. Now, the main stocks in my portfolio are AMD, POWL, FHN, and SMCI. I've learned enough over the years to understand most of what y'all talk about, just not enough to truly analyze stocks myself. I'm here to learn more.
ProgN
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aggieland28 said:

Thank you for the guidance. I'll elaborate on my story a bit. Started in early 2017 with around 2,700. First 4 stocks were CHK, AAPL, SONY, and JPM. Many different stocks along the way. I added to my portfolio as I acquired money, the bulk of which came from working summers. Really just held stocks for a while, watching from afar, making moves in terms of where stocks would be in years, not worrying about periods shorter than that. Now, the main stocks in my portfolio are AMD, POWL, FHN, and SMCI. I've learned enough over the years to understand most of what y'all talk about, just not enough to truly analyze stocks myself. I'm here to learn more.
Welcome to the clubhouse and we're all here to help. Don't be intimidated about asking questions. We can't help if don't know your questions.
Carlo4
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AG
As someone who hasn't posted here in months, I came to check NVDA results…


Heineken-Ashi
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aggieland28 said:

Thank you for the guidance. I'll elaborate on my story a bit. Started in early 2017 with around 2,700. First 4 stocks were CHK, AAPL, SONY, and JPM. Many different stocks along the way. I added to my portfolio as I acquired money, the bulk of which came from working summers. Really just held stocks for a while, watching from afar, making moves in terms of where stocks would be in years, not worrying about periods shorter than that. Now, the main stocks in my portfolio are AMD, POWL, FHN, and SMCI. I've learned enough over the years to understand most of what y'all talk about, just not enough to truly analyze stocks myself. I'm here to learn more.
Happy to have you here, but its the bolded part that gives me pause in this market. Not that I expect you to be able to, but because it leaves you completely reliant on the winds of the market. And you are primarily invested in a very elevated and likely overvalued tech bubble. Those stocks have to continue to outperform in a market that continues to stay bullish in an economy that doesn't deteriorate. You don't really have much to fall back on if they don't.

On a 1-year horizon I'm personally bearish AMD, neutral POWL but might be leaning bearish, neutral to bearish SMCI (was strong bearish a couple months ago, but its mostly played out.. and might continue to), and very bearish on the banking sector (though I can make a case FHN goes to $30 before it drops). 3-5 years, it all depends on the individual stocks.

I wouldn't put any new money in those stocks. I'd start to diversify with some exposure to durables, energy, and metals. But right now, I would be very careful on everything. I've made my opinion clear on that.

Please ask questions. There's a lot of experience on this board. And my views are strictly my own. Highly recommend learning how to DD on stocks yourself. I know it's tough with a day full of classes, studying, and being a wholesome kid while definitely not partying and chasing the opposite sex, but you have enough exposureto start taking the next steps and being way ahead of your peers. Don't fall in the trap of risking everything you've built up over a handful of volatile stocks. While the SPX seems like it goes up forever, the overwhelming majority of individual stocks dont. Many hit major highs and no new value is created for a very long time. Keep yourself aligned with where the bull is.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
El_duderino
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Unfilled gap at $543 on top of a weekly pivot at $546 for SPY. I see high probability of those being filled/hit as we head into September
CC09LawAg
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Maybe. This all feels like a major overreaction. SPY is barely lower than today's low.

I wouldn't be surprised if we open red and close green tomorrow.
Brewmaster
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AG
aggieland28 said:

Thank you for the guidance. I'll elaborate on my story a bit. Started in early 2017 with around 2,700. First 4 stocks were CHK, AAPL, SONY, and JPM. Many different stocks along the way. I added to my portfolio as I acquired money, the bulk of which came from working summers. Really just held stocks for a while, watching from afar, making moves in terms of where stocks would be in years, not worrying about periods shorter than that. Now, the main stocks in my portfolio are AMD, POWL, FHN, and SMCI. I've learned enough over the years to understand most of what y'all talk about, just not enough to truly analyze stocks myself. I'm here to learn more.
Take some profits if you haven't already. There's a reason why whales like Buffet are cash heavy right now...and keep in mind Buffet is about as patient as they get.
and first and foremost, when Heineken and Prog speak, listen and glad to have you here!
Brewmaster
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AG
Heineken-Ashi said:

aggieland28 said:

Thank you for the guidance. I'll elaborate on my story a bit. Started in early 2017 with around 2,700. First 4 stocks were CHK, AAPL, SONY, and JPM. Many different stocks along the way. I added to my portfolio as I acquired money, the bulk of which came from working summers. Really just held stocks for a while, watching from afar, making moves in terms of where stocks would be in years, not worrying about periods shorter than that. Now, the main stocks in my portfolio are AMD, POWL, FHN, and SMCI. I've learned enough over the years to understand most of what y'all talk about, just not enough to truly analyze stocks myself. I'm here to learn more.
Happy to have you here, but its the bolded part that gives me pause in this market. Not that I expect you to be able to, but because it leaves you completely reliant on the winds of the market. And you are primarily invested in a very elevated and likely overvalued tech bubble. Those stocks have to continue to outperform in a market that continues to stay bullish in an economy that doesn't deteriorate. You don't really have much to fall back on if they don't.

On a 1-year horizon I'm personally bearish AMD, neutral POWL but might be leaning bearish, neutral to bearish SMCI (was strong bearish a couple months ago, but its mostly played out.. and might continue to), and very bearish on the banking sector (though I can make a case FHN goes to $30 before it drops). 3-5 years, it all depends on the individual stocks.

I wouldn't put any new money in those stocks. I'd start to diversify with some exposure to durables, energy, and metals. But right now, I would be very careful on everything. I've made my opinion clear on that.

Please ask questions. There's a lot of experience on this board. And my views are strictly my own. Highly recommend learning how to DD on stocks yourself. I know it's tough with a day full of classes, studying, and being a wholesome kid while definitely not partying and chasing the opposite sex, but you have enough exposureto start taking the next steps and being way ahead of your peers. Don't fall in the trap of risking everything you've built up over a handful of volatile stocks. While the SPX seems like it goes up forever, the overwhelming majority of individual stocks dont. Many hit major highs and no new value is created for a very long time. Keep yourself aligned with where the bull is.
Heineken-Ashi
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oldarmy1 said:

Quote:

Most people who don't follow the market don't get it. Traders aren't trying to predict the market as no one can do that. Experience teaches one how to deal with different types of markets. Investing and trading is about probability. You look for high probability setups and ride them when you are right and cut losses quickly when you are wrong. Most are unable to do this because people don't like to admit they are wrong but it is essential in trading.


It appears many feel that trading is nothing more than throwing a dart onto a list of stocks and hoping they get it right.

Your response is accurate for many successful traders. However, it's more about ones willingness and capacity to become educated, experienced and willing to work in understanding all aspects of economies, economics, technology, human nature, political policies, on and on and on.

The ones who would say its impossible in the face of factual proof indicates to me they do not recognize the intense hard work it requires. A coin flip? The lottery? Gambling? My word!

You replied to the poster who included a revealing statement in which he says that what worked in one decade won't work in the next. No kidding, Sherlock! If you think professional traders are simply looking for something that "works" then it demonstrates the lack of realization on how markets work.

I wonder how many in here have actually held a paper share of stock in their hands? Yeah, things change. But we aren't trees. We can move, grow, learn. How many have spent time on the NYSE trading floor? Do you know how the next wave of Artificial Intelligence Neural Networks work, or how that technology assimilates multisourced data and "learns"? Do you look at a P/E and stock brief when choosing to invest in a single stock? Or do you listen to the quarterly earnings broadcast, speak with senior executives, their suppliers, financers and competition? Yup, it's a lot of work but I don't go to Vegas when I invest!
To any newbs or newer lurkers. Have you read the first page of this thread? If not, start over and go do that. Have you followed OA1 on twitter yet? Do that next.

Most of the people here learned their first trading strategy reading the first page of this thread. It gives such incredible, yet simple insight. Even if you've been here a while. Go read it again. I do once a month. While OA1 isn't here as much these days, his impact is. Don't forget where this started and how it became the best thread on texags and one of the rarest places on the internet.. where you don't have to pay a dime but get inundated with a constant bombardment of knowledge and ideas from people on all spectrums of trading.

The quote above is one of the best in the history of this thread.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Heineken-Ashi
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FUBO - not as strong as I wanted off the June low. Chart tells you what to expect and levels to watch. Could be a great R/R in this range with very limited downside loss potential.

"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Heineken-Ashi
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Those that have asked about platinum. This is my current view. That gray lower line is your GTFO level.

"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Heineken-Ashi
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KVUE - Called this one out a month or two ago in the $18 range. Target was $23. Not a lot to gain, but the loss potential was miniscule making it a great place to park some cash. Minimum target has been hit at $22. I got stopped out as I had my stop at a hard bottom and it made an incremently lower low from June to July. Too tight of a stop as it was a fake out bottom. That new bottom lowered the 100% target from $23 to $22.

But the point is.. sometimes charting is super easy. Obvious downtrend line with a flattish bottom. Whichever broke first would tell the new direction. 100% move (measuring bottom to top of the Oct 2023 to Dec 2023 move from the bottom in July 2024) achieved. No upside beyond this guaranteed, but you can see the levels overhead should it continue. You could take your money out and re-deploy somewhere else, or take your chances that this is a new bullish trend that has started. Draw a fib retracement from $17.67 to $22 and get out if it crosses below the 61.8% fib.

"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Quacked
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Nice try Mr . Liang!
ProgN
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Who the **** are you? You want to compare brainpans regarding stocks buttercup?
Quacked
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Apologies trying to laugh through the pain. I actually bought more SMCI today, and plan on more under 400. Just a joke CFO
Philip J Fry
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AG
Probably not the best time to make a joke like that. Read the room dude.
Heineken-Ashi
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Saw this one had some volume today. XPEV. Know nothing about it. But look at Gap Island in 2023. Super simple basic charting. Break above $10, and off to the races with $13-$20 being the next resistance point. Break below, and free fall. What's stopping you from buying this with stop at $6.17? Potential to lose a little over $1. But potential to gain $5-$13. You'd have to steal my password and liquidate my account to get me to not take a stab at this.

"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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"Done."

-US Treasury Dept
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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Really weird afterhours on the Nasdaq. Maybe panic selling and then sobering up? Maybe running it up AH to liquidate higher during the day session?
Brian Earl Spilner
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AG
So, wanted to make sure my understanding of CC's is correct.

Assuming after the SMCI split I have 720 shares @ $56, currently at $44, and I'm prepared to hold until $60.

I sell 7 covered calls with a strike price of $60, and keep the premium regardless of what the stock does.

1. Stock never reaches the strike price. I have to hold onto my shares, but I lowered my cost basis by the amount of the premium.

2. Stock hits the strike price, shares gets called away, my profit is limited to $60/share, plus the premium.
Swollen Thumb
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AG
Correct.
Brian Earl Spilner
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AG
Going to sell some CC's on TOS paper money today to start.
Talon2DSO
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AG
Yes.
Anastasia Beaverhaven
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Is there a preferred site to practice selling covered calls or trading options?
Heineken-Ashi
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Anastasia Beaverhaven said:

Is there a preferred site to practice selling covered calls or trading options?


What do you mean practice? Thinkorswim and TradingView have features where you can paper trade historical points in the market, being able to fast-forward and rewind. But if you're talking about just modeling the option, you can use a website like optionstrat.com.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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I prefer to sell CC on a run up when it looks exciting and at a decent strike about current price. I do not like to sell CC at or just above current price nor on a blah or down trend. I feel like the premium I pocket doesn't make up for bags I hold if the stock moves against me.

I'd rather be in the position of potebtially missing out on some upside than on potentially holding bags till expiry or buying back CCs. Mentally that feels better to me.
kyle field 94
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AG
Technically your cost basis stays the same for tax purposes, and the option premium received is taxed at short term income rates

Heineken-Ashi
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The best time to sell covered calls is after a solid up trend at a point when volatility is extremely high. You're essentially selling a topping of sentiment and profiting off expected volatility decrease.

Take NVDA for example… The best time to sell a covered call was a point significantly out of the money yesterday. Even if the stock makes a big jump, The premiums are going to naturally decrease because volatility at its absolute peak during earnings and trails off the next couple weeks.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
I bleed maroon
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AG
Brian Earl Spilner said:

So, wanted to make sure my understanding of CC's is correct.

Assuming after the SMCI split I have 720 shares @ $56, currently at $44, and I'm prepared to hold until $60.

I sell 7 covered calls with a strike price of $60, and keep the premium regardless of what the stock does.

1. Stock never reaches the strike price. I have to hold onto my shares, but I lowered my cost basis by the amount of the premium.

2. Stock hits the strike price, shares gets called away, my profit is limited to $60/share, plus the premium.
This is correct, and I would concur with paper trading them for a while till you see how they work in the real world. Some things I'd like to point out:

  • You're not lowering your cost basis. You are lowering your average cost. The IRS still considers your original price paid as the taxable cost. The option is a standalone cost basis and return item.
  • For that reason, I like to look at it as a way to make your money work for you (call premium), while mitigating some risk on your existing holding - realize however, that if the stock price plummets, you don't have downside protection, except for the premium you've collected.
  • Be careful about capital gains - - if you write calls on a highly appreciated stock and it gets called away, you're forced to recognize the gain (and pay taxes) even if you really didn't want to sell it. The only alternative at that point is to "roll" the calls out to an extended expiration date or strike price.
  • It's best to map out the potential outcomes in advance - what if scenarios for each type of price movement. Your broker likely has charts which can help you analyze this.
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