I don't get what DELL is doing. Really thought we had a bull flag and earnings were solid.
So, to clarify for the amateur investor, you expect SLV to exceed these prices in those months so you can purchase SLV at the above-mentioned prices and automatically create profit? Or you will sell the calls at a higher premium and book profit - and not own any SLV shares?Heineken-Ashi said:
Added Sep $26, Oct $27, and Nov $27 calls in SLV.
September will be selling for quick profits if it goes back up. Oct will likely be quickish profits too. November I am looking for SLV $30+South Platte said:So, to clarify for the amateur investor, you expect SLV to exceed these prices in those months so you can purchase SLV at the above-mentioned prices and automatically create profit? Or you will sell the calls at a higher premium and book profit - and not own any SLV shares?Heineken-Ashi said:
Added Sep $26, Oct $27, and Nov $27 calls in SLV.
Did not hold and has gotten quite deep. Yellow is best case if previous low can hold. I'd honestly prefer it sell to a marginally lower low and provide a better bounce off that low to project even higher moving into next year.Heineken-Ashi said:
ALB has dropped below the 61.8% retrace of its last move up and now recovered. Really need that to hold as bottom. If so, I've got some targets going up and applied a loose wave count as possible path. Yellow is an alternate bullish path showing a choppy diagonal up which does grow in probability when Wave ii drops below the 61.8%.
Thank y'all for the kind words. I'm just in the middle of dealing with some personal real-life issues. I haven't sold anything, or I'd have posted before I did. I also haven't bought anything because September usually sucks. So I've just sidelined myself for the time being. If I'm not going to put my money into a rec, then I will not make one for you guys.I bleed maroon said:ProgN is pretty much the gold standard around here for disclosure of his thought process and investment thesis. I hope he continues to provide ideas to the board, so we can all make our own decisions.SW AG80 said:
I hope ProgN is doing OK. Haven't heard from him in a while. With the kind of money he has invested in just SMCI and POWL he has to be somewhat concerned. But in time those investments will work out.
Many of us have made $$$ from Prog's info. My thanks to him.
I usually only do it during dips in bull markets. Haven't done one in months. But this one is coming into my target zone, I already have a position, I plan to add to the position, so this is a great way to lower basis. But like any put sale, it's risky in that there's over a month to expiration, and should the stock slip substantially lower I'll be assigned shares at a likely premium to where the price might be. But with this one, I'm ok with that.EnronAg said:
I normally sell puts when I have a decent cash position and do it with rock solid companies like AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, etc about 10-15% out of the money where I either clear the premium or own the stock at a discount to current MTM...just curious, how do you generally trade short put positions???
Since H-K has mostly addressed this, I'll just add a few thoughts.South Platte said:So, to clarify for the amateur investor, you expect SLV to exceed these prices in those months so you can purchase SLV at the above-mentioned prices and automatically create profit? Or you will sell the calls at a higher premium and book profit - and not own any SLV shares?Heineken-Ashi said:
Added Sep $26, Oct $27, and Nov $27 calls in SLV.
I bleed maroon said:Since H-K has mostly addressed this, I'll just add a few thoughts.South Platte said:So, to clarify for the amateur investor, you expect SLV to exceed these prices in those months so you can purchase SLV at the above-mentioned prices and automatically create profit? Or you will sell the calls at a higher premium and book profit - and not own any SLV shares?Heineken-Ashi said:
Added Sep $26, Oct $27, and Nov $27 calls in SLV.
- It seems that H-K and I have very similar views on buying calls - I consider it a pretty risky speculative play, which to me means I am comfortable with the "hero or zero" outcome. I will make a good profit (usually in the 50% - 100%+ range), or they will expire worthless, meaning I lost all my investment. This is not investing with a mind to own the stock for me, it's simply a relatively low-cost (compared to buying the stock) leveraged way to profit from an upside potential I feel strongly about. I almost always close an option position before expiration.
- Ditto on buying put options. Same story, different direction.
- Selling either put options or call options without holding the underlying equity has a whole different risk profile. I would recommend against either, until you've written covered calls (or initiated buy/writes) on existing positions for a while to see how they behave.
- Obviously, the biggest downside is that these suckers expire at a given point, so they constantly "decay" due to the diminishing time left to achieve your goals. This is part of what makes them so risky. They are also relatively illiquid (they're traded in MUCH lower volumes than equities), which makes it tougher to both enter and exit a position at your chosen transaction price. The main exceptions are SPY and QQQ options, which are heavily traded.
At the end of the day, options are like dating: buying calls is essentially speed-dating a stock, buying equities are more of a marriage type of commitment. You can still divorce them, but when dating, you can drop them anytime a better option comes around. There are some serial breakup/makeup people on this thread - - Brian Earl Spilner has an interesting relationship with TNA, as an example.
I will stick with my assessment in advising novice traders. Selling $90 puts on a $100 Enron stock that's headed for $1 virtually overnight can be pretty bad, especially in an illiquid trading market. At least you could have some hope to sell the Enron stock before it tanked too badly.FishrCoAg said:
Fully agree with the exception of selling puts. I do that to buy the stock at a price I want or collect the premium if it doesn't get that low. The decay works in my favor there.
I bleed maroon said:I will stick with my assessment in advising novice traders. Selling $90 puts on a $100 Enron stock that's headed for $1 virtually overnight can be pretty bad, especially in an illiquid trading market. At least you could have some hope to sell the Enron stock before it tanked too badly.FishrCoAg said:
Fully agree with the exception of selling puts. I do that to buy the stock at a price I want or collect the premium if it doesn't get that low. The decay works in my favor there.
Selling naked calls - - unlimited risk of loss (not too many are brave enough for this)
Selling naked puts - - risk is up to the underlying stock going to $0
Heineken-Ashi said:He's not going anywhere. He's probably just rolling out of bed with his fun pal.I bleed maroon said:ProgN is pretty much the gold standard around here for disclosure of his thought process and investment thesis. I hope he continues to provide ideas to the board, so we can all make our own decisions.SW AG80 said:
I hope ProgN is doing OK. Haven't heard from him in a while. With the kind of money he has invested in just SMCI and POWL he has to be somewhat concerned. But in time those investments will work out.
Many of us have made $$$ from Prog's info. My thanks to him.
Disagree. You can easily set stops for stocks. Not advisable for illiquid positions like puts.FishrCoAg said:I bleed maroon said:I will stick with my assessment in advising novice traders. Selling $90 puts on a $100 Enron stock that's headed for $1 virtually overnight can be pretty bad, especially in an illiquid trading market. At least you could have some hope to sell the Enron stock before it tanked too badly.FishrCoAg said:
Fully agree with the exception of selling puts. I do that to buy the stock at a price I want or collect the premium if it doesn't get that low. The decay works in my favor there.
Selling naked calls - - unlimited risk of loss (not too many are brave enough for this)
Selling naked puts - - risk is up to the underlying stock going to $0
No more risk than buying the stock itself if a free fall like that happens.
frankm01 said:
Hey guys, my wife and l are unable to make tomorrow's game at Kyle Field. If anyone is interested in my 2 tix (free), send me an email at username @ flash.net. They'll have to be transferred via 12thman app. Sorry, no parkiing pass available.
Game is at 1145 am..seats are in sec 117, so it'll be toasty if sunny. Let me know.
frankm01 said:
Hey guys, my wife and l are unable to make tomorrow's game at Kyle Field. If anyone is interested in my 2 tix (free), send me an email at username @ flash.net. They'll have to be transferred via 12thman app. Sorry, no parkiing pass available.
Game is at 1145 am..seats are in sec 117, so it'll be toasty if sunny. Let me know.
Yessir I bought some 33C and some 35C just in case.EliteZags said:
LFFFFGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
Yup. And could be. Lots of negative news this week.Diggity said:
is this a play that the Biden administration is bluffing about blocking the sale to Nippon?
Seems like they're SOL if they get blocked.
Heineken-Ashi said:
So about that rotation into small caps.. do yall now see why I said dont trust it?
Spoony Love said:
What changed today versus yesterday? 3 pages back you said you weren't going to touch steel with too many headwinds. And I still agree about the hurdles in the industry. Just trying to understand what the chart is showing now.
IMO, the sale will go through. It's an immediate jump to $55/share.
I'll be buying next week as well. Forgot to jump in today.