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	<title>Call Option Trading Secrets &#187; Stock Option Trading</title>
	<atom:link href="http://calloptiontrading.net/tag/stock-option-trading/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://calloptiontrading.net</link>
	<description>Making money with call options</description>
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		<title>Option Trading Tip &#8211; Are You A Jack Of All Trades &amp; A Master Of None?</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/option-trading-tip-are-you-a-jack-of-all-trades-a-master-of-none-2</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/option-trading-tip-are-you-a-jack-of-all-trades-a-master-of-none-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Jan 2010 06:11:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Option Trading Tip]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


I make a living out of trading options&#8230;and a pretty good one at that!  
For a long time I couldn&#8217;t say those words as I struggled just to hold on to my capital, let alone make it grow. 
Though there were several reasons why I struggled (including being grossly undercapitalized and at the same [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I make a living out of trading options&#8230;and a pretty good one at that!  </p>
<p>For a long time I couldn&#8217;t say those words as I struggled just to hold on to my capital, let alone make it grow. </p>
<p>Though there were several reasons why I struggled (including being grossly undercapitalized and at the same time placing too much of my trading bank on individual trades) the main reason for my struggle I believe was a lack of focus. </p>
<p>By &#8216;lack of focus&#8217; I mean that I was constantly jumping around trying to implement too many different option trading strategies from basic call and put buying, to putting on multi leg spread tades, believing that the more complex the strategy, the greater my chance of success. </p>
<p>I had become a &#8216;Jack Of All Trades &amp; A Master Of None&#8217; and the only people that were making money from my option trading were my brokers. </p>
<p>One day a friend of mine (a very successful futures trader) said to me, &#8220;You don&#8217;t need to know everything about trading the markets to make money and be a success. You just need to &#8216;focus&#8217; and become an expert in one or at most a few different trading strategies and know exactly when and how to use them. The rest is just practice!&#8221; </p>
<p>Those words rang loudly in my ears and from that point onwards I narrowed my focus. </p>
<p>I decided that I would go back to the very basics of option trading and only buy calls and puts with the intention of becoming very good at picking the short-term direction of stocks. </p>
<p>Today, almost 2 years later and after going through a steep and often expensive learning curve, buying calls and/or puts is what brings in the largest portion of my current monthly income. </p>
<p>I also use a couple different spread trading strategies when the market moves sideways, but my main &#8216;focus&#8217; is on picking the short-term direction of a small number of stocks that I have gotten to know VERY well (through backtesting), and then buying the appropriate option based on risk vs reward and my short-term outlook. </p>
<p>The success I&#8217;m enjoying today (19 profitable months out of the last 24) is due to becoming proficient at reading stock charts and developing an option trading system that I am comfortable with and performs well and by applying my trading rules consistently. </p>
<p>Ultimately you only need to know a few different strategies to be able to trade any stock up, down, or sideways. </p>
<p>The options themselves are simply the &#8216;tools&#8217; to make money from your &#8216;opinions&#8217; and in my experience the tools that are the easiest to use, have also been the most profitable. </p>
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		<item>
		<title>Stock Option Trading â Candlesticks &amp; OHLC Bars Lose their Patterns on a Distribution Curve</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-candlesticks-ohlc-bars-lose-their-patterns-on-a-distribution-curve-2</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-candlesticks-ohlc-bars-lose-their-patterns-on-a-distribution-curve-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 23 Jan 2010 05:37:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Candlesticks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elliot Wave]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Option Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[P&f]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Point & Figure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


Time-based charts (namely Candlesticks, OHLC Bars and Heikin-Ashi) fail to truly depict price.Â  This article will help you realize that time-based pattern recognition is an unreliable method for stock option trading.Some retail training firms like to popularize the myth that, âEveryone looks at these patterns in the chartsâ.Â  They are partly right.Â  Though, their use [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Time-based charts (namely Candlesticks, OHLC Bars and Heikin-Ashi) fail to truly depict price.Â  This article will help you realize that time-based pattern recognition is an unreliable method for stock option trading.Some retail training firms like to popularize the myth that, âEveryone looks at these patterns in the chartsâ.Â  They are partly right.Â  Though, their use of the term âEveryoneâ applies to retail off-the-floor traders who collectively only make up ~ 15% at most, in some cases even less, of the total traded volume on exchanges, depending on which exchange it is.Which raises the question: What are the eyes of those on the floor moving 80+% of traded volume looking at?Â  Some of you have visited the exchanges organized through your broker.Â  If youâve picked up the paper scattered on the floor, all youâll find is quick math notation: addition, subtraction, division and multiplication. Nothing more.Â  No drawings of a Tri-Star Doji, Dumpling Tops or Frypan Bottoms.Â  It makes sense, because all that is in front of floor traders are screens with price data and price alone.Â  With truck loads of calls and puts to hedge, floor traders could care less how many times during the day, price touched the tail of a dragon fly doji.Â  Theyâve already pre-planned to get more of; or, offload their inventory of calls/puts at a specific strike, for a given price.As a retail option trader, trading less than 10 contracts per trade, you are not exempt from tuning your eyes to focus only on price.Â  How do you simulate the observation of price alone from off-the-floor, if you remove the use of Candlesticks, OHLC Bars and Heikin-Ashi charts? Use Point &amp; Figure charts instead.Why is it valid to only use Point &amp; Figure charting for trading options? It is the only method that plots just one type of data â price alone without time â price is the only data element needed on a distribution curve.Â  The same distribution curve used in the Bjerksund-Stensland, Black-Scholes or Binomial pricing models in your options trading platform. What about other charting methods like Candlesticks and OHLC Bars?Â  Letâs take the Doji, a well known candlestick, as an example.Â  The Doji is characterized by itâs Open and Close at the same price, the High is a different price from the Low.Â  Remember with a Distribution Curve, it records Price on the Horizontal axis and Frequency on the Vertical axis.Â  To map the doji onto the relevant axis of the distribution curve, it needs to be flipped on to its side, for the dojiâs price points to line up against the vertical axis.Â  So, a price that Closes at the same price it Opened, is recorded as 2 price points with twice the frequency of the High and Low.Â  With a distribution curve, you cannot leave the lines joining the dots of the doji on the graph.Â  All that is mapped is 4 dots representing the dojiâs price points.Â  Take away the lines joining the dots.Â  Question: Whereâs the doji? Not relevant anymore. Same logic applies to any candlestick (spinning top, hammer, etc.).Â  Candlesticks lose their characteristics, once they are mapped onto a distribution curve.Â  The implication is the same for the OHLC method used to count fractals in Elliot Waves and wave counts once price is mapped in its dispersion mode, the waves lose their characteristics. To visualize this problem with time-based charts, watch the video on Why Time-Based Charts (Bar/ Candlesticks/Heikin Ashi, etc.) lose their characteristics once mapped onto a Distribution Curve.Is it necessary to reconcile a charting method with the distribution curve? Yes, 68% is equal to one Standard Deviation (?).Â  â/+1? sets the parameters for the probabilities, which you construct an option spread around to test if the strikes will be touched or not touched, from the date a spread is filled till its expiry date.Bear in mind, changing the time frames in time-based charts be it Candlesticks, Heikin-Ashi, OHLC from minute/hour/day/week to reconcile conflicting patterns in one time-frame against another, does nothing to help you work out the Theta as decay in a debit spread; or, the positive Theta as premium sold in a Credit spread.Â  The only unit of time required to feed into a Theoretical pricing model is the expiration date, in turn affecting the probabilities per day for the number of days that passes.Â  As the units of time in time-based charts have no value in Theoretically pricing an option, it makes no sense to use them.So, what are time-based charts (Candlesticks, OHLC Bars and Heikin-Ashi) useful for? They are useful, for trading the underlying itself.Â  When you trade the underlying itself, aside from dealing with +/- Delta (directional risk), all the other Greeks (Gamma, Theta and Vega) are equal to zero.Â  Time-based charts are relevant for trading deep ITM options as a surrogate to the product for purely directional trading of the underlying itself.Do bear in mind with options, the deeper the ITM you go, the wider the Bid-Ask spread becomes compared to the narrower Bid-Ask spread differences in the ATM or OTM strikes.Â  Have you got enough capital in the account to keep trading at the ITM strikes only?Â  This is why many retail traders with account sizes below USD $25K look for increasing lower priced products, for e.g. $20 and below, as they search for ITM strikes that are affordable for them to trade using Candlestick/OHLC/Heikin-Ashi charts.Â  By virtue of being lower priced, these products often suffer illiquid open interest at their strikes, making you chase price for an uncompetitive fill, only to result in poor price-profit performance.Â  The other extreme is to over spend on ITM strikes of a higher priced product, for example $100 and above, as you found a trade candidate using some âspecialâ pattern scanning software, only to breach the money management rule of 2%-5% per trade, in filling the order.Is there an example of a portfolio with consistent wins and limited losses that applies Point &amp; Figure methods without the use of Candlesticks/OHLC/Heikin Ashi? Yes.Â  Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ for a model retail option traderâs portfolio that only uses Point &amp; Figure techniques.Â  Other than stock option trading, the portfolio includes option trades from non-equity asset classes.Light is needed to see; but, trading enlightenment will not come from a candlestick. And counting fractals within waves only serves to oscillate your pupils. </p>
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		<title>Stock Option Trading â Fundamental Flaw in Fundamental Analysis and Stock Picking</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-fundamental-flaw-in-fundamental-analysis-and-stock-picking</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-fundamental-flaw-in-fundamental-analysis-and-stock-picking#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:26:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fundamental Analysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How To Trade Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Relative Strength]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


Clinging on to Fundamental Analysis and stock picking software, only keeps you stuck in trading equities. Trading this way, compounds concentration risk in one asset class and fails to adequately diversify risks across Equities, Bonds, Currencies and Commodities.Â  Thereâs much more to stock option trading, than stock itself.I cite Benjamin F. Kingâs study, quoted repeatedly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Clinging on to Fundamental Analysis and stock picking software, only keeps you stuck in trading equities. Trading this way, compounds concentration risk in one asset class and fails to adequately diversify risks across Equities, Bonds, Currencies and Commodities.Â  Thereâs much more to stock option trading, than stock itself.I cite Benjamin F. Kingâs study, quoted repeatedly since 1966, because it remains valid and has yet to be disproved to the point of dismissing its logic.Market and Industry Factors, Journal of Business, January 1966:Â  â Of a stockâs move &#8230; </p>
<p>There must be a more compelling reason for you to trade stock other than just for the movement, if only 20% is unique to the underlying equity in question.Â  Consider this, in context of the Fundamental Analysis or stock picking software that you bought on a per $1 basis.Â  For each $1 dollar you spend, you âoutsourcedâ the analysis at a cost of 80 cents, only to receive back 20 cents worth of work. Shouldnât the 80:20 rule of âoutsourcingâ be the other way round? The problem is that you are still stuck with 80% of the work, to analyze price movement!Â  Plus, the more you use FA techniques/stock picking software, the more trading capital is stuck in equities alone.Now, you can say âspecialâ research papers help you pick stocks.Â  Letâs have a look at some of the more common fundamental metrics in these research subscriptions:1. Dividend Yield: the problem is in the variability of yields as firms are in different stages of their business development.Â  A Mature company that dominates in a well established sub-segment/sector is able to afford a different dividend yield; versus, a Young company in a growth-oriented field; versus, a Small firm in a growing area that may not be able to afford a dividend payout.Â  Bear in mind there is nothing special about firms that pay a dividend.A company that gives away a portion of itâs retained earnings &#8211; which is what a dividend is &#8211; effectively gives away part of its valuation, which means it is not worth as much as a company that does need to give investors candy to commit capital to it.Â  So, a dividend paying stock has to be far superior to a non-dividend paying stock for reasons other than the dividend.Â  If it is not, thereâs no point looking for dividend paying products to trade, there are plenty of non-dividend paying Indexes to trade.2. Price/Book Ratio: the problem is this metric varies across industries and from company to company, as the asset base and capital structures of companies change over time. It lacks cross sector applicability and accounting complexity arises from a firmâs capital structure as it changes due to acquisitions/divestments/CAPEX for new product lines; or, product line cut-backs, as recently seen in the restructuring of major US car companies.3.Â  Price/Cash Flow Ratio (the cousin of the P/E): accounting laws on depreciation vary across Asia, Europe and US.Â  As accounting rules are driven by tax codes, which change considerably across regions despite adoption of global accounting standards, there is a lack of uniformity in homogenizing a fundamental ratio that will fit as a common benchmark across geographies. These metrics fail to help you compare say a Dell parented in the US to an Acer parented in Taiwan; but, is listed as an ADR in the US, even though both are competitors in the same sector as computer manufacturers. Furthermore, the current dislocated cost of capital in credit markets, impairs the ability of corporations to optimize the operating cost of their balance sheets.Â  In essence, corporations are left with the working capital cash flows remaining on their balance sheets, as testament to their financial strength. Do not waste your money on Fundamental Analysis software or research paper subscriptions.As there is a fundamental flaw in fundamental analysis and stock picking, how do you select trades?  Trade the options of a broad-based Equity Index to replace single stock exposure.Â  To replace Fundamental Analysis, use the Relative Strength measure based on Point &amp; Figure methods.What is Relative Strength?Â  It is nothing more than taking one price as the Numerator, divided by another price as the Denominator, then multiplied by 100.Â  RS = (Price 1 / Price 2) x 100.Â  Typically, RS calculations use daily closing prices.Â  Though simple in its mathematical construction, RS is ingeniously powerful when it is applied not only within a sector; but, across sectors and between asset classes.Letâs start of within a sector.Â  For example, if you choose 2 semiconductor stocks trading at different prices, how do you know if one stock is outperforming the other in the same sector, when the 2 stocks have price changes at different rates; plus, the sectorâs price itself is also changing?SOX = Semiconductor Sector Index, trades up from 452.24 to 467.81.Numerator1: Â Â Â  Â Price1 = BRCM 33.15Â Â  Â RS1 = 7.33Â Â  Â Price2 = 33.80Â Â  Â RS2 = 7.23Numerator2: Â Â Â  Â Price1Â  = TSM 9.91Â Â  Â RS1 = 2.19Â Â  Â Price2 = 13.43Â Â  Â RS2 = 2.87Common Denominator: Â Â Â  Â SOXÂ  Price 1 = 452.24Â  Â Â Â  Â Â Â  Â Price 2 = 467.81BRCMâs RS1 = (33.15/452.24) x 100 = 7.33. BRCM&#8217;s RS2 = (33.80/467.81) x 100 = 7.23. Â TSMâs RS1 = (9.91/452.24) x 100 = 2.19.Â  TSM&#8217;s RS2 = (13.43/467.81) x 100 = 2.87.BRCM&#8217;s price rises from 33.15 to 33.80 and TSM&#8217;s price also rises from 9.91 to 13.43.Â  Simply because BRCM is a larger stock, does that mean it benefits from the SOX trading up? No, the RS reading (RS1 compared to RS2) shows BRCMâs RS reading dropped (7.33 down to 7.23) against TSMâs RS reading, which increased (2.19 to 2.87).Â  RS confirms TSM as the outperformer rising in price strength versus BRCMâs weakened price.Â  RS is constructed on pure price rules.Â  Using an Index as the denominator, acts as a much more durable benchmark and is structurally more reliable, compared to any âmagicalâ TA indicator; or, combination of income statements, balance sheets and cash flow statements touted in stock picking programmes.You can replace BRCM or TSM with Indexes or ETFs.Â  Using Indexes with Relative Strength enables a common denominator to compare Equities against Bonds, Commodities and Currencies, to crossover into asset classes other than stocks to trade.Â  Itâs not that Relative Strength is infallible.Â  But compared to the fundamental metrics cited above, Relative Strength fails the least.Â  Break the mould on what you learnt about stock option trading.Is there an example of an optionable and consistently profitable portfolio that trades using Relative Strength across multiple asset classes? Yes.Â  Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ to see a retail online option trading portfolio that excludes the use of single stocks and Fundamental Analysis, using broad based equity Indices, Commodity ETFs and Currency ETFs.Â  There is no need to trade FX directly. Just trade the options of Currency ETFs. </p>
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		<title>How to Trade â Book Review &#8211; Kenneth L. Grant, Trading Risk</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/how-to-trade-a%c2%80%c2%93-book-review-kenneth-l-grant-trading-risk</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/how-to-trade-a%c2%80%c2%93-book-review-kenneth-l-grant-trading-risk#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jan 2010 05:40:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How To Trade Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kenneth Grant]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Managing Risk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Risk Analysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Risk Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Managing the performance of your trading account must go beyond the discipline of money management. While money management remains critical, it is a subset of the total picture of managing your trading accountâs profit and loss.That total picture is what Kenneth L. Grant aptly paints in his book, Trading Risk.Â  Total performance management of trading [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Managing the performance of your trading account must go beyond the discipline of money management. While money management remains critical, it is a subset of the total picture of managing your trading accountâs profit and loss.That total picture is what Kenneth L. Grant aptly paints in his book, Trading Risk.Â  Total performance management of trading must treat the profit and losses in a trading account at 2 levels â the portfolio level and at the individual trade level. Kenneth L. Grant is Cheyne Capitalâs Global Risk Manager and notable pioneer in designing risk control and capital allocation programs for global hedge funds.Â  Typically with most literature on risk management, you would expect complex numerical formulas beyond the reach of most retail traders who do not have a mathematical background.Â  Kenneth writes in a style that does emphasize the robustness of arithmetical reasoning, but helps you visualize the various types of risks with ample graphs. The content is not so numerically oriented that it is beyond the grasp of anyone who is comfortable with Statistics 101.There are adequate reader reviews on Amazon and Google Book Search, to help you decide if you will get the book. For those who have just started or are about to read the book, Iâve summarized the core concepts in the larger and essential chapters to help you get through them quicker.The number on the right of the title of the chapter is the number of pages contained within that chapter. It is not the page number.Â  The percentages represent how much each chapter makes up of the 244 pages in total, excluding appendices.Chapter 1:Â  The Risk Management Investment.Â  18,Â  7.38%.Chapter 2:Â  Setting Performance Objectives.Â  18,Â  7.38%.Chapter 3:Â  Understanding the Profit/Loss Patterns over Time.Â  44,Â  18.03%.Chapter 4:Â  The Risk Components of an Individual Portfolio.Â  28,Â  11.48%.Chapter 5:Â  Setting Appropriate Exposure Levels (Rule 1).Â  24,Â  9.84%.Chapter 6:Â  Adjusting Portfolio Exposure (Rule 2).Â  22,Â  9.02%.Chapter 7:Â  The Risk Components of an Individual Trade.Â  58,Â  23.77%.Chapter 8:Â  Bringing It on Home.Â  32,Â  13.11%.Focus on chapters 2, 3, 4 and 7, which makes up about 61% of the book. These chapters are relevant for practical trading purposes.Â  Here are the key points for these focus chapters, which Iâm summarizing from a retail option traderâs perspective. Chapter 2: Setting Performance Objectives. There are 3 types of targets to set at the portfolio level. </p>
<p>Chapter 3: Understanding the Profit/Loss Patterns over Time. This chapter evaluates the profit and loss in terms of Time Units (typically day and week) feeding into Time Spans, Average Profit versus Average Loss, Standard Deviation, Sharpe Ratio, Median P/L, Percentage of Winning Days versus Losing Days, Drawdown and Correlation Analysis. This section focuses on the core metrics of trade performance, for a given period: </p>
<p>In calculating the metrics, it becomes clear if your strengths are in trading long debit spreads, short credit spreads, directional trades (be it up/down) or non-directional trades. Trade in line with what you are intuitively profitable at, be that debit/credit spreads or directional/non-directional trades. The metrics help you guard against trading counter-intuitively in opposition to your strengths. Chapter 4: The Risk Components of an Individual Portfolio. The emphasis of this chapter is on Historical Volatility, Correlation and Implied Volatility and Value at Risk (VaR). While it is educational to understand how these various risks can be aggregated up into a single, portfolio measure of exposure, it is not useful for option traders trading retail portfolios from home.Â  Why?Â  To re-simulate the test scenarios on the portfolio cited in the text, requires specific types of data. The Account Statement of most retail option trading platforms only record each tradeâs profit, loss and date. The additional data of each dayâs Historical Volatility, Implied Volatility, Correlation coefficient values and Standard Deviation/Variance values will need to be sourced from outside the trading platform.Â  Unless you are trading multiple portfolios on behalf of other individuals, VaR simulations make sense. If you are trading just your own portfolio, it more useful to get an Implied Volatility tool that forecasts IV rising or falling by X% over 30-60-90-120 days.Â  This is a much more affordable way to assess the total impact of IV and Correlation in IV on your portfolio.Chapter 7: The Risk Components of an Individual Trade. The section to focus on here is the Core Transaction-Level Statistics. This includes the Trade Level P/L, Holding Period, Average P/L, Weighted Average P/L, Average Holding Period, P/L by Security or Asset Class and Long Side P/L versus Short Side P/L.Â  The main point here is to monetize the Average Holding Period of a long or short position. For example, as a guideline: </p>
<p>In conclusion, the critical points to focus on are the 3 types of targets at the portfolio level, the core metrics of trade performance, identifying your intuitive trading orientation and monetizing the average holding period of long and short trades for efficient trade turnover.Â  Translating these specific elements of trading risk into methods you can rely on every day, builds the required consistency in the profit and loss of your trading account. </p>
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		<title>Online Options Trading â Portfolio Measures and Trade Performance Metrics</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/online-options-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-portfolio-measures-and-trade-performance-metrics</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/online-options-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-portfolio-measures-and-trade-performance-metrics#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2010 17:34:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asset Allocation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How To Trade Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Online Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portfolio Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Reward of Profit and the Risk of Losses for retail option trading needs to be managed at 2 related levels of performance: Portfolio and Trade Specific.At the Portfolio level for online options trading, there are 3 types of Targets that must be set, even before you trade.Maximum Return Target: complete achievement of the âidealâ [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Reward of Profit and the Risk of Losses for retail option trading needs to be managed at 2 related levels of performance: Portfolio and Trade Specific.At the Portfolio level for online options trading, there are 3 types of Targets that must be set, even before you trade.Maximum Return Target: complete achievement of the âidealâ measure. Dream of the âidealâ that stretches you beyond what is practical. For example, earn 2-3 times your monthly living expenses with the monthly trading profit. This is to stretch your imagination well beyond mediocrity. Even if you fail, you just might end up with more than your original target.Minimum Return Target: the lowest acceptable measure, achievable under most conditions, excluding a catastrophic market event. Use the historical annualized return of the S&amp;P 500 between 10%-12% (prior to the 2008 financial pandemic), as the lowest acceptable boundary.Â  The S&amp;P 500 being a widely accepted benchmark for trading equities is adequate to base the minimum target off, though your portfolio needs to be profitable â being ahead of the $SPX in negative territory does not count.Â  Below the historical annualized return range of 10%â12%, is the 3 Month T-Bill, presently near zero.Â  While the T-bill theoretically represents an âabsolutelyâ zero risk investment, even the safest investments will still carry a residual amount of risk no matter how small that risk is.Â  The point is this.Â  You got into options and all that Greek terminology, not to make salads; but to beat the performance of equities as an asset class.Â  If your portfolio&#8217;s return is between what is near zero-risk and 10%â12% per annum, you are just delaying reaching a point of pain that marks failure in grasping the base-line ability to control risks.Â  If the returns of your portfolio are between 0%â12% and you plan to continue trading options, processes within your trading process will need to be reâengineered.&#8221;Halt Trade&#8221; Target: cumulative losses reach an absolute amount below the Minimum Return, making it necessary to stop trading altogether for a stated period.Â  10% of [(60% x Cash Balance at the start of the year); or Net Liquidating Value].Â  Example, for a $50,000 trading account, 10% x (60% x $50,000) = $3,000 of losses in total, is the absolute amount to halt trading.Â  Why 10%? Blowing up your self-funded capital is final.Â  There is no bail out package, as a home options trading business does not have access to bank loans; or, shareholdersâ equity to finance your personal trades.Now, drilling down to Trade Specific performance measures.Even before you calculate the metrics, characteristically, what makes for a consistently managed portfolio are these traits: </p>
<p>Where can I see this step up function in a consistently profitable portfolio, with these portfolio measures and trade performance metrics? Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ to see a model retail option traderâs portfolio that shows these traits.Moving onto the hard metrics.Â  Thereâs 2 ways to count the Return on your trading capital. </p>
<p>In both cases, you can minus the Total Cost of Commissions from Total Profit, to get a Total Net Profit number.Â  The, divide the Total Net Profit by the Start of Year Cash Balance; or, Net Liquidating Value.Â  Net Liquidating Value is how much your entire trading account is worth, which is equal to Total Cash + Options Value + Stocks Value + Commodities Value + Bonds Value. The Start of Year Cash Balance is straightforward â it is the money in the account at the beginning of that trading year. Cash increases when you are short securities; but, cash decreases, as you get long on securities.To review your performance, calculate these metrics using the Profit (wins) and Loss (losers) from your account: </p>
<p>The Average Win divided by the Average Loss measures how RESPONSIVE you are in taking profits and cutting losses.Combine the Accuracy ratio with the Responsiveness ratio to get your Performance Ratio.Performance Ratio = (Win/Loss Probability) x (Average Win / Average Loss).Â  Always aim to maintain the Performance Ratio above 1.00. Why?Â  The commonly known money management rule is to allocate 2%-5% of (60% x Net Liquidating Value of the account) per trade.Â  What is not commonly practiced is the discipline of moderating a +/- 1% in trade allocation between the 2%-5% allocation. </p>
<p>This is how to achieve a ladder effect in stepping up profits and stepping down losses. This mechanism of stepping up/down is an indispensable tool for rewarding profit and to discipline the risk of losses.Â  It forces you to improve both ACCURACY and RESPONSIVENESS before raising your position size. </p>
<p>Where can I learn more about portfolio measures and trade performance metrics as part of a total trading system? Follow the link below, for 55 hours of video-based learning of online options trading from home. </p>
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		<title>Options Trading Strategies â Wrong Use of Historical Volatility and Implied Volatility Crossovers</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/options-trading-strategies-a%c2%80%c2%93-wrong-use-of-historical-volatility-and-implied-volatility-crossovers</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/options-trading-strategies-a%c2%80%c2%93-wrong-use-of-historical-volatility-and-implied-volatility-crossovers#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2010 05:46:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historical Volatility]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[How To Trade Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Implied Volatility]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Volatility]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://calloptiontrading.net/options-trading-strategies-a%c2%80%c2%93-wrong-use-of-historical-volatility-and-implied-volatility-crossovers</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Not all volatilities are constructed equal.Â  It is critical to differentiate between Historical Volatility and Implied Volatility, so retail traders learn how to trade options focused on what is material to theoretically price option spreads forward.Historical Volatility (HV) measures past price movements of the underlying asset recording the asset&#8217;s actual or realized volatility.Â  The more [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Not all volatilities are constructed equal.Â  It is critical to differentiate between Historical Volatility and Implied Volatility, so retail traders learn how to trade options focused on what is material to theoretically price option spreads forward.Historical Volatility (HV) measures past price movements of the underlying asset recording the asset&#8217;s actual or realized volatility.Â  The more commonly known type of HV is Statistical Volatility, which computes the underlying assets return over a finite but adjustable number of days.Â  Let me explain what âfinite but adjustableâ means.Â  You can vary the number of days to measure the Statistical Volatility: for example, 5-10-50-200 days, thatâs how time-based moving averages and momentum/oscillator studies are built.Â  Though, it is not the case with Implied Volatility.Implied Volatility measures expected values by repetitively refining bid-ask estimates.Â  These estimates are based on the expectations of buyers and sellers. The buyers and sellers (85+% of floor traded volume is driven by institutions, floor traders and market makers) behind the bid and ask values, who do change their estimates within the day, as new information be it macro-economic news or micro-economic data impacting the underlying product becomes available.Â  What is being estimated is the underlying assetâs future fluctuation with certain assumptions embedded into the changes in information of the underlying.Â  That refinement of bid-ask estimates must be completed within finite time-bound option expiration periods. Thatâs why there are monthly and quarterly option expiration cycles. You cannot change these expiration periods, either by shortening or lengthening the number of days, to âconstructâ a time period that gives you faster or slower crossover indicators.Why point out the wrong use of Historical Volatility and Implied Volatiity Crossovers? It is to caution you against the defective use ofÂ  HV-IV crossovers, which is not a reliable trading signal.Â  Remember, for a given expiration month, there can only be one volatility over that specific period.Â  Implied Volatility must leave from where it is currently trading at, to converge at zero on expiration date. Implied Volatility (be it IV for ITM, ATM or OTM strikes) must return to zero on expiry; but, price can go anywhere (up, down or stay flat).To continually sell âoverpricedâ and buy âunder pricedâ options would eventually cause the implied volatility of every single non-zero bid option to line up exactly.Â  Meaning the phenomenon of IVâs âsmilingâ skew disappears, as IV becomes perfectly flat. This hardly happens, especially in highly liquid products. Take for example, the SPY, a broad-based Index; or, GLD â the SPDR Shares ETF in a fast market like Gold. With open interest at the non-zero bid strikes going into the thousands and tens of thousands, do you really think a retail off the floor trader is going to be allowed to âout priceâ the professional hedger on the floor?Â  Unlikely. Calls and Puts in highly liquid products, are like items in an inventory with high supply because there is high demand.Â  This type of inventory does not get âmispricedâ because floor traders have to make a daily living from trading the Calls and Puts âthey will refuse to carry the risk of mispricing overnight.So, what are the key considerations to banking in your edge as a retail trader?  </p>
<p>Where can I learn how to trade options with consistent profits focused on Implied Volatility without Historical Volatility? Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ to see a model retail option traderâs portfolio that excludes the use of HV and focuses on trading only IV. Iâll cite these actual historical events, to bolster the argument for removing Historical Volatility from your trading process altogether.27 Feb, 2007: Widespread Panic from the sizeable China sell-off in equities. If you were trading the options of an index like the FXI which is the iShares product of Chinaâs 25 largest and most liquid Chinese companies though listed in the US; but they are headquartered in China, you would have been impacted. While you can argue itâs possible to have market events recreate the ranges of the Dow, Nasdaq &amp; S&amp;P, how do you recreate the scenario of the VIX and VXN soaring 59% and 39%?22Jan, 2008: Fed cuts rates by 75 basis points prior to the scheduled policy meeting on Jan 30th, whereby the FOMC cut another 50 basis points on the date of the meeting.Â  If you were trading interest-rate sensitive sectors using the options on a Financial ETF or a Banking Index like the BKX; or, the Housing Index like the HGX, you would have been impacted. And in the current environment of rates being near zero, the FOMC while they still have a rate policy tool, they are unable to cut rates by the same number of basis points like before. What was a historical event is not successively repeatable going forward, not until rates are raised again and subsequently they get cut again.Question: How do you reconstruct history?Â  That is the history of events forming Historical Volatility.Â  The answer is in the real examples cited, as with any other financially related historical event &#8211; you cannot reconstruct history. You may be able to mimic parts of HV but you cannot repeat it in its entirety.Â  So, if you continue using HV-IV crossovers, you visually confuse yourself by searching for volatility âmispricingâ patterns that you would like to see; but, you will end up with poor profit performance instead.Â  It makes more practical trading sense to focus purely on IV; then, diversify the trading of volatilities across multiple asset classes beyond equities.Where can I learn more about trading IV across multiple asset classes using only options, without having to own stock? Follow the link below (video-based course), that uses IV Mean Reversion/Mean Repulsion and IV Forecasting, as reliable methods to trade the implied volatilities across broad-based Equity Indexes, Commodity ETFs, Currency ETFs and Emerging Market ETFs. </p>
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		<title>Risk of âunlimited Losesâ in Naked Option Selling is a Myth!</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/risk-of-a%c2%80%c2%98unlimited-losesa%c2%80%c2%99-in-naked-option-selling-is-a-myth</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/risk-of-a%c2%80%c2%98unlimited-losesa%c2%80%c2%99-in-naked-option-selling-is-a-myth#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2010 05:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investing In Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Naked Option Writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Naked Writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Option Investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Option Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Selling Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing Naked Options]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[For option sellers it is disconcerting to hear people say that selling naked options is extremely risky because it carries the threat of âunlimited losesâ. Nothing is farther from the truth! Itâs a myth! Itâs about time we correct this misconception and put this fear to rest. 
While theoretically the selling of naked options carries [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For option sellers it is disconcerting to hear people say that selling naked options is extremely risky because it carries the threat of âunlimited losesâ. Nothing is farther from the truth! Itâs a myth! Itâs about time we correct this misconception and put this fear to rest. </p>
<p>While theoretically the selling of naked options carries with it the potential for unlimited loses, in the real world this so-called risk is controllable to such a large degree as to be meaningless. Thousands of option sellers are successfully making a good living and growing their capital doing nothing but sell naked options. The fact is, all these successful traders are employing certain safeguards or protective trading strategies that allow them to defeat this âunlimited riskâ factor. </p>
<p>Those who believe that naked option selling has the potential for âunlimited losesâ are obviously misguided in their belief. Selling or writing naked options when done in a disciplined manner coupled with proper protective trading techniques and sound money management is no riskier than buying options. Seasoned options traders who specialize in naked writing regard option buying as a riskier, more speculative trading strategy. Statistics show there are more traders who lose money as option buyers than option sellers. </p>
<p>Options are decaying assets. They lose value each day that the underlying stock to which they are attached remains unchanged or moves in a negative direction. The magnitude of daily losses depends on many factors but the primary one being the behavior of the underlying stock. An option buyer (versus an option seller) is faced with this dilemma and can only be a winner if he correctly determines the movement of the stock and the magnitude of the move. If the market moves in the opposite direction or if it does not move at all, the option buyer is a loser. The option buyer must not only correctly foretell market direction but his prediction must be accompanied by a major move in the market. A less than significant move will still result in a loss for the option buyer. </p>
<p>On the other hand, the option seller takes maximum advantage of the decaying characteristic of options. As an option seller he merely sits and waits for the option to lose value daily to the point of being worthless on expiration day. He does not need to correctly predict market direction to generate profits. If he sells puts, he is a winner if the stock stays flat, a winner if the stock goes up. He can only lose if the underlying drops far enough to hit past his strike price position. This means that even if the stock goes down he is still a winner if the move is not far enough to hit his strike position. If he is a call seller, he wins when the stock drops, stays flat or moves up less than significantly. Admittedly, during the validity period of the option until its expiration date, the option seller faces the potential threat that the underlying stock may move continuously against him past his strike position, in which case there would be no limit to his loses. But this can only happen if the seller is careless enough not to watch and monitor his position on a regular basis! </p>
<p>Options are not âbuy and holdâ securities. All options traders, buyers and sellers alike, carefully watch their positions on a regular frequency. In their march towards expiration dates options are always in motion in tandem with their underlying stocks thereby continuously presenting opportunities for making profits or presenting danger signals for incurring losses. Option sellers are a more cautious lot than buyers and consequently sellers have developed various protective trading techniques to offset the so called âunlimited riskâ factor to the point where it is nearly a neglible risk. What are these trading techniques? Each option seller may have his own system but here are a few strategies that conquer the risk. </p>
<p>1.Â Â Â Â Â Â  First and foremost and probably the most important thing to consider when getting into selling options is the choice of securities. Highly volatile stocks are most susceptible to the highest risks because of their potential for making dramatic price moves up or down. While volatile stocks tend to offer attractive option premiums, this benefit can be cancelled by the higher risk of a major negative move. A price gap out in a stock can cause severe losses. Conservative option sellers who make a living or grow their wealth selling options will often tend to play ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) or Indexes instead of stocks. These securities seldom undergo dramatic one day moves and it is even less vulnerable to price gap outs. </p>
<p>2.Â Â Â Â Â Â  Careful monitoring of position â As mentioned earlier, option sellers tend to be a cautious lot and anyone who sells options and does not watch the progress of his position can only be considered dumb or stupid. One does not need to be glued to his computer screen and watch every move in the stock market. He only needs a cursory look at the market now and then to see how things are developing. When a situation starts building up where oneâs short position may be in danger, action can immediately be initiated before it degenerates into a bad situation. The option sold may be bought back immediately at a slight loss before it gravitates to bigger losses. This slight loss can be no more than what an option buyer would be exposed to in a similar negative scenario. And this is assuming the option seller does nothing more than buy back the losing position. But if his monitoring is combined with the other strategies illustrated below then the risk of loss is nearly nil. </p>
<p>3.Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Use of stop losses â For the trader who does not have the time to occasionally watch the market he may use stop losses on his positions at the same time that he initiates the short positions. There is no need to explain here what a stop loss is as it is presumed anybody who is in the stock and options market knows what this is. Additionally, with the advent of online trading, electronic alerts can be initiated with brokers so that when a perilous situation starts developing an automatic alert signal is sent to the traderâs email, iphone, or cell phone. </p>
<p>4.Â Â Â Â Â Â  Use of credit spreads â Here again there is little need to explain what a credit spread is as once more it is assumed that options traders know what this strategy entails. This trading method coupled with careful monitoring and the use of the stop loss is enough to almost guarantee that the option trader will never be exposed to the fear of âunlimited lossâ. </p>
<p>5.Â Â Â Â Â Â  Use of the roll-out feature of options â This is one strategy that is not being used to maximum advantage by many option sellers. Based on their personal trading experiences and extensive use of this feature those who have been using it swear by it as a powerful defensive strategy in preventing losses in option selling. </p>
<p>Strategy number 5 above is effective enough when used alone and by itself, but when combined with the other strategies above, the whole system becomes a formidable program that almost totally eliminates losses in option selling. One particular options seller has personally developed his own system of using a combination of all the above in his option trading activities and he says with much confidence that he sleeps very well at night thinking he will never ever be subjected to the so called risk of âunlimited lossesâ. He has written an e-book about his system and in it he describes in much detail the methodology he uses in overcoming the risk. Anyone interested may visit his web site at: http://www.theoptionseller.com </p>
<p>For those who are contemplating of getting into the option selling business, pay no heed to the naysayers. Next time you hear someone say ânaked option selling is extremely risky due to the potential for unlimited lossesâ that person is most likely an option buyer who has never ventured into the lucrative field of option selling. His remark obviously comes from his ignorance of the inner workings of options and the various safeguards available to the option seller. To the knowledgeable option seller the risk of losing money is less than the risk facing the option buyer. </p>
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		<title>Option Trading Tip &#8211; Follow A Consistent &#8216;Routine&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/option-trading-tip-follow-a-consistent-routine</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/option-trading-tip-follow-a-consistent-routine#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 06:04:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Option Trading Tip]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://calloptiontrading.net/option-trading-tip-follow-a-consistent-routine</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just as elite athletes go through a specific warm-up routine for their body and their mind before competing at a meet, we too as option traders need to follow a specific routine/process before we enter a trade and compete in the markets. 
Here is the step-by-step routine that I follow each market day when looking [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just as elite athletes go through a specific warm-up routine for their body and their mind before competing at a meet, we too as option traders need to follow a specific routine/process before we enter a trade and compete in the markets. </p>
<p>Here is the step-by-step routine that I follow each market day when looking for new short-term option buying opportunities. </p>
<p>1) I wake up at 5am Australian time (3pm New York time &#8211; 1 hour before the close) and go to the computer. </p>
<p>2) I then pull up the &#8216;real-time&#8217; charts in my watchlist and check the DOW, S&amp;P 500 and Nasdaq Comp to see if the day&#8217;s sentiment is bullish, bearish or neutral. I then check each individual stock chart for my core Call or Put buying &#8216;trigger&#8217; which is either a higher trough or a lower peak. </p>
<p>3) As I go I make a list of those stock codes that fit this criteria so I can analyze their charts further. </p>
<p>IF NO STOCKS FIT THIS CRITERIA MY ROUTINE IS COMPLETED UNTIL THE NEXT MARKET DAY! </p>
<p>IF THERE ARE STOCKS THAT FIT THIS CRITERIA, I CONTINUE ON. </p>
<p>4) I then focus on each of these charts and analyze the underlying long and short-term trend, long and short-term moving averages, RSI, bollinger bands, potential breakout patterns or candlestick reversals and last but not least, volume.<br />
 &#8211; I&#8217;m looking for &#8216;evidence&#8217; of an imminent upside or downside move. </p>
<p>5) I then try to cull this list so that only the highest probability trades remain. </p>
<p>6) I then run the remaining stocks through my Volatility Cone to establish whether implied volatility is low, high or fair. </p>
<p>7) I then take another run through my remaining stock charts and choose the single best opportunity, taking all factors into consideration including my GFI (&#8217;Gut Feel Indicator&#8217;). </p>
<p> <img src='http://calloptiontrading.net/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_cool.gif' alt='8)' class='wp-smiley' /> I then login to my trading account and check out strike prices, expiry months and delta. </p>
<p>- If the options on the stock I have chosen have high implied volatility, I will be looking to buy the current month deep ITM options, with a delta as close as possible to 1. </p>
<p>- If the options on the stock I have chosen have low implied volatility and the stock has formed a reliable break-out pattern, I will be looking to buy the next month out, ATM options with a delta close to 50. </p>
<p>- If the options on the stock I have chosen have relatively &#8216;normal&#8217; implied volatility, I will be looking to buy the next month out, ITM the money options with a delta of 75-80. </p>
<p>9) Once I have found the strike price and expiry month I want, I then work out roughly how many contracts I can buy considering per my capital allocation for the trade (usually 10-15% of my short-term trading bank). </p>
<p>10) I then pull up the order form I need and fill everything out except for the limit price. </p>
<p>11) I then wait until 3.45pm and as long as the stock is trading within the top 1 third of the day&#8217;s range for calls OR the bottom 1 third of the day&#8217;s range for puts, I enter in my limit price (usually the &#8216;ask&#8217; price for tight spreads or &#8216;in between&#8217; the bid and ask for wider spreads) and pull the trigger. </p>
<p>12) Once the order is filled, I then place a 20% trailing stop on the option, which will close out the trade &#8216;at market&#8217; if hit. </p>
<p>13) I then fill out my trading diary, which includes the details of the transaction and exactly &#8216;why&#8217; I got into the trade and what my exit scenarios will be, and attach a copy of the stock chart. </p>
<p>ROUTINE COMPLETED! </p>
<p>NOTE: If I am currently in a trade/trades this process will also include analyzing that/those particular stock charts and making my decision to either stay in or exit the postion(s). </p>
<p>Now the reason I just shared my daily routine with you was to illustrate the importance of &#8216;consistency&#8217;. </p>
<p>When you follow a trading system and analysis sequence consistently, you get to a point where you know EXACTLY what you need to do and EXACTLY what you are looking for. </p>
<p>This keeps you objective, focused (i.e. not jumping around all over the place looking for trades) and also supports you making the best possible use of your time.  </p>
<p>Afterall, who wants to be staring at a computer screen all day? I have found success in letting my trades come to me on my terms and that fit in with my &#8216;routine&#8217;. </p>
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		<title>Stock Option Trading Guide for Beginner</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-guide-for-beginner</link>
		<comments>http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-guide-for-beginner#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Dec 2009 05:25:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://calloptiontrading.net/stock-option-trading-guide-for-beginner</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There are four different types of players in the stock option trading game. They are buyers of calls, sellers of calls, buyers of puts, and seller of puts. The buyers are called holders, and the sellers are called writers. Buyers of calls are said to have a long position, while buyers of puts are said [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are four different types of players in the stock option trading game. They are buyers of calls, sellers of calls, buyers of puts, and seller of puts. The buyers are called holders, and the sellers are called writers. Buyers of calls are said to have a long position, while buyers of puts are said to have a short position.  </p>
<p>Calls are useful in speculation, and puts are useful in hedging. It is all going to depend on the strike price of the underlying asset on the expiration date. If all of this makes perfect sense to you, there is not much need to read on, but if it sounds a bit hazy, a little review might be in order. </p>
<p>The Stock Option market has its own unique language. Like many other activities, an understanding of the terminology used is essential. In many cases, it is a rather simple concept hidden behind an unknown term that leads to confusion, and makes the activity appear a lot more complex than it actually is. The following are a few definitions that might help take away some of the mystery.<br />
 &#8211; Calls: A call is basically a contract giving you an option, but not an obligation to purchase a block of stocks at a set price on or before a certain date. In understanding a call, it is important to remember that you are not obligated to make the purchase. You can exercise your option or not.<br />
 &#8211; Puts: A put is the opposite of a call in that it is a contract to sell a block of stock at a set price on or before a certain date. Again, this is a choice. You can make the choice not to sell.<br />
 &#8211; Holders: This is the name given to the buyers of the contracts. It is the holders that give the option trading market its name since they are the ones who actually are in a position to make the decision to exercise their options.<br />
 &#8211; Writers: Since it is a &#8220;trading&#8221; market, two parties are necessary. If someone is buying, than someone else must be selling. The writers are the sellers of the contracts. It is important to remember that the writers are not the ones with the options. They do have an obligation to honor the contract if the holder decides to exercise his option.<br />
 &#8211; Long Position: In stock trading, long position means that you are holding the stock in anticipation of it increasing in value.<br />
 &#8211; Short Position: In stock trading, short position means that you are holding the stock in anticipation of it decreasing in value.<br />
 &#8211; Underlying Asset: The underlying asset, or as it is sometimes called, the underlying, is the actual stock or security that is the object of the option contract. The contract is said to derive its value from the intrinsic value of the underlying asset.<br />
 &#8211; Strike price: This is the price at which the option contract will be purchased or sold. If you purchase an option to buy, or make a call, at $10 , but the value of the underlying asset is only $8, you are $2 under the strike price, and most likely would not wish to exercise your option.<br />
 &#8211; Speculation: This is the risk taking side of option trading. It is generally associated with calls and long positions. It essentially means that you are expecting a stock price to rise higher than the strike price.<br />
 &#8211; Hedging: This is the cautious side of option trading. It is generally associated with puts and short positions. You are anticipating that the value of the underlying asset will drop below the strike price. It is called hedging because it is often used to protect an investment, or hedge your bet, by maintaining an option to sell at a certain strike price should the underlying asset take a serious drop in value. In other words, you are able to bail out before your loss becomes too large.<br />
 &#8211; Expiration date: This is the date on which your option must be exercised or it will be lost. It is the deadline. In the stock option market it is usually the third Friday of a month. </p>
<p>The above are a few of the terms that are used in the stock option trading market, and by understanding them completely you should be better armed to take a closer look at this interesting investment opportunity. </p>
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		<title>Tips for Better Options Trading</title>
		<link>http://calloptiontrading.net/tips-for-better-options-trading</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Dec 2009 17:30:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Future Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Option Trading Software]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trading Option]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[There are two types of options available: call options and put options.
Call options give the taker the right but not the obligation to buy the shares at a specific price on or before a specific date.
The put options give the taker the right but not the obligation to sell the shares at a specific price [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are two types of options available: call options and put options.</p>
<p>Call options give the taker the right but not the obligation to buy the shares at a specific price on or before a specific date.</p>
<p>The put options give the taker the right but not the obligation to sell the shares at a specific price on or before a specific date. The taker of a put is only required to deliver the underlying shares if they exercise option.</p>
<p>There are a few advantages in option trading:</p>
<p>Put options allow you to hedge against a possible fall in the price of the shares you hold. You can consider taking it out as insurance against a loss in the share price.</p>
<p>By taking a call option, the purchase price for the shares is locked in. This gives the call option holder until the expiry date to decide whether he or she will or will not buy the shares. This is also applicable to the taker; he or she has to decide whether or not to sell the shares before the deadline.</p>
<p>The ease of trading in and out of an option position makes it possible to trade options with no intention of ever exercising them. If you expect the market to rise, you may want to buy call options, and if you are expecting a fall in the market, you may decide to buy put options. This means that you can sell the option prior to the expiry date to take a profit or limit a loss.</p>
<p>Options also allow you to build a diversified portfolio for a lower initial outlay than purchasing shares directly.</p>
<p>The income generation for options can get you profits over dividends by writing call options against your shares. By writing an option, you receive the option premium up front. While you get to keep the option premium, it is possible that you could be exercised against and have to deliver your shares to the taker at the exercise price. This strategy uses stock bought on margin.</p>
<p>By combining different options, or stocks with options, you can create a wide range of strategies.</p>
<p>You can earn extra income by writing options against shares you already own or are purchasing. This is one of the simplest and most rewarding strategies.</p>
<p>Using options gives you time to decide. Taking a call option can give you time to decide if you want to buy shares. You pay the premium, which is only a fraction of the price of the underlying shares.</p>
<p>The option then locks in a buying price for the shares if you decide to exercise. You then have until the expiry date of the option to decide if you want to buy the shares. This is the same as to the put option.</p>
<p>Keep in mind that, same as any other trades do not trade what you cannot afford to lose. </p>
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