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<channel>
	<title>Strangle Options Strategy &#187; Option Trading</title>
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	<description>When you expect big action, but you don&#039;t know what it will be...</description>
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		<title>Fellow Options Traders, Why Aren&#8217;t You Selling Options in Your Trading Account?</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/fellow-options-traders-why-arent-you-selling-options-in-your-trading-account</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/fellow-options-traders-why-arent-you-selling-options-in-your-trading-account#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Jan 2010 21:08:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Calls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Covered Calls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iron Condor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Puts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Straddles]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://strangleoptions.net/fellow-options-traders-why-arent-you-selling-options-in-your-trading-account</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[



The only explanation which would seem acceptable is no one has shown you how to perform this marvel of printing money before, so you are a bit unsure of how to go about doing so!If this is your situation, then you are excused&#8230;But if not, you are truly missing out. Even if you are in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The only explanation which would seem acceptable is no one has shown you how to perform this marvel of printing money before, so you are a bit unsure of how to go about doing so!If this is your situation, then you are excused&#8230;But if not, you are truly missing out. Even if you are in the first situation, you are still missing out!No matter how long have you been an options trader, you will eventually find out that there is quite a bit of uncertainty involved with buying options.The Chicago Mercantile Exchange estimates over 80% of all options sold expire worthless. So why aren&#8217;t you selling them instead of buying them?An option is considered a &#8220;wasting asset.&#8221;  Time value erodes as each day passes, accelerating as the option&#8217;s expiration nears. This is referred to as &#8220;time decay&#8221;.If the underlying contract does not move far enough by expiration, the option will have no value left and expire worthless and the option seller will keep the premium.When selling (or writing) an option, we get paid the premium up-front and we take advantage of &#8220;time decay&#8221;.However, it is simply not enough to know that to selling options generates significant premiums, you must also have a well throughout strategy for performing this. Along with this, you will also need to make corrections for when the market goes out of your favor.We have solved this by only selling straddles. You seasoned guys know what a straddle is. It is simply having a neutral outlook on the market, and trading it accordingly. By selling straddles, we are essentially playing both sides of the market. Stocks go up, down or stay the same. So we hedge our bets in both directions and hope that the stock remains flat.Our view stems from the fact that, a directional move will increase one side of the option play, and decrease the other side. So even if you may loose money in one position, we are gaining money in another. and by staying flat, both sides simply reduce to zero.Since we only sell out of the money positions, unless the stock breaks through the strike price, at expiration, best case scenario is we make money on both option legs. Worst case scenario is we loose on one leg, and we gain on the other, coming out with a wash.Or the more likely scenario, is both option legs are reduced to a level which we are happy to take profits.However, even though we believe selling options can potentially put the odds of success in your favor, it still requires good, solid market analysis. That&#8217;s how we, as seasoned traders arrive at our option picks!After trading options for many years with so much success, we see no reason to buy options. We have discovered, when options are sold correctly and carefully, they can generate a higher percentage return than any other option or stock trading strategy.Novice traders benefit the most from our alerts because they soon realize the difference is, selling options gives you a larger margin for error. You don&#8217;t have to be exact, only close.OPTIONXSPREADS is a group of ex-stockbrokers and investors who have developed this site to allow the ordinary investor to trade along with the pros, and have a chance to double, tripple and quadruple their investment dollar. And all you have to do is follow our trades and make money!Even if you do not follow our trades, realize that you should incorporate option selling into your trading strategy, to take advantage of the favorable odds! To see how we provide tremendous gains to our members every month, visit our website: www.optionxspreads.com </p>
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		<item>
		<title>Is Option Trading Gambling?</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/is-option-trading-gambling</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/is-option-trading-gambling#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jan 2010 20:44:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Options Trading]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://strangleoptions.net/is-option-trading-gambling</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We have seen it way too often, haven&#8217;t we?
Advertisements that tout making thousands of percents in profits within days and millionaires made within weeks, all by  option trading! Such advertisements usually draw hordes of hungry, indebted gamblers who need that &#8220;one big win&#8221; to recover their debts or losses elsewhere to their unusually expensive [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We have seen it way too often, haven&#8217;t we?<br />
Advertisements that tout making thousands of percents in profits within days and millionaires made within weeks, all by  option trading! Such advertisements usually draw hordes of hungry, indebted gamblers who need that &#8220;one big win&#8221; to recover their debts or losses elsewhere to their unusually expensive seminars.<br />
95% of those who walked into such seminars, paid for it and actually traded options, lost all their money. 3% will make some money within the first few trades and then lose it all subsequently. 1% will really make some sustainable money and a final lucky 1% will make the 1000% a month on their first month (again, just to lose it all within the next month). Anyone who has been in this predicament usually think that option trading is nothing more than just a gamble on an instrument that has no value of its own.<br />
Yet, many professional traders and fund managers are making a good, consistent profit from option trading! These professionals don&#8217;t make 1000% a month in profits, neither will they ever, but they continue to make a living in the markets month after month, year after year (me included)!<br />
So, what makes option trading a real investment and trading activity to these professionals and a mere gamble for those who lost all their money attending option trading seminars?<br />
The difference is in ATTITUDE. Attitude governs decisions and actions. Anyone who approaches option trading with the &#8220;get-rich-quick&#8221; attitude will also soon find themselves &#8220;getting-poorer-quicker&#8221; simply because these punters hoping to &#8220;make-it-big&#8221; on their next trade, totally rejects any semblance of a trade management strategy, totally cast aside sensible analysis in favor of a 50/50 &#8220;bet&#8221; and take totally senseless out of the money positions that either make it big or expire completely worthless!<br />
A real option trading professional utilizes sensible money management strategy on every trading opportunity, weighted against the potential risk of non-performance. This means that a real option trader will never put all his money into one big out of the money position! A real option trading professional utilizes trade analysis methods based on proven methodologies so as to put the odds of performance in their favor and never treat every trade as a 50/50 bet. A real option trading professional calculates the amount of options leverage to be used on every trade so that his portfolio is never over-leveraged. A real option trading professional do not expect to make it big on his next trade and he is not aiming for one huge home run but a series of small wins that eventually adds up. A real option trading professional never allow one loss to wipe out his portfolio because he treats the market with respect knowing that no matter how much analysis has been conducted, there is always a chance that the market will work against him.<br />
In a nutshell, a real option trading professional (and an option trading winner who stays in the game for years) differ from a gambler (who rarely survives for more than a month) mainly in terms of mental attitude! The wrong mental attitude transforms option trading from the sensible and sophisticated financial instrument that it is into nothing more than lottery tickets.<br />
The problem with most option trading seminars today is that they don&#8217;t put these critical elements of successful option trading together! All they teach are how option trading can make anyone rich very quickly! It is like teaching someone how to queue up for a lottery ticket! A real option trading system incorporates all the critical elements to successful option trading; From looking for trading opportunities systematically, to analysis of that opportunity in view of the trading horizon required, to selecting the correct option based on the requirements of that opportunity to risk balanced trade management and more! One such option trading methodology is the Star Trading System that I have taught online for years.<br />
So, isn&#8217;t it time you reviewed your attitude and approach towards option trading? </p>
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		<title>Why Simple Put Options Buying Fail in Volatile Markets</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/why-simple-put-options-buying-fail-in-volatile-markets</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/why-simple-put-options-buying-fail-in-volatile-markets#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jan 2010 09:01:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Options]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://strangleoptions.net/why-simple-put-options-buying-fail-in-volatile-markets</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The recent stock market crisis (2008) took the stock market down by more than 30% in less than a year. This has a lot of traders thinking that big money can be made simply by buying put options on stocks that will move down with the market, especially high beta ones. Nothing can be further [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The recent stock market crisis (2008) took the stock market down by more than 30% in less than a year. This has a lot of traders thinking that big money can be made simply by buying put options on stocks that will move down with the market, especially high beta ones. Nothing can be further from the truth. Most amateur options traders who did that either failed to make any money, make very little money or outright lose money even though the stock moved down a lot as predicted. Why is that so?<br />
Volatile market conditions are especially bad for buying stock options due to 2 reasons. Firstly, the extreme volatility resulted in extremely high implied volatility which increases the extrinsic value of options dramatically, depressing its profitability. Secondly, extreme volatility leads to extreme speculation which encourages market makers to open up the bid ask spread to an unreasonably wide level in order to fill their own pockets.<br />
Extrinsic value is the price one pays to the seller of stock options in order to justify the risk undertaken by the seller for giving such a right to the buyer. This price is arrived at in theory by options pricing models such as the Black-Scholes model. Extrinsic value directly affects the profitability of the options as the higher the extrinsic value of an option, the more the underlying stock needs to move in order to breakeven or profit. For example, if two options based on the same underlying stock, the same strike price and expiration month have different extrinsic values (of course this cannot be the case in reality), the option with the higher extrinsic value will make lesser money in profit than the option with the lower extrinsic value when the underlying stock moves by the same amount when held to expiration.<br />
Extrinsic value is affected mainly by the level of implied volatility of the underlying stock. If the underlying stock is expected to make big moves, implied volatility goes up and the extrinsic values of its options go up as well. In times of extreme market volatility, extrinsic values go up dramatically across the board, depressing the profitability of options. In fact, one could end up losing more money than usual if the stock does not move according to expectations due to the higher extrinsic value paid. This is why a lot of amateur options traders who simply bought put options recently failed to make much money or any at all. This situation is made even worse by the wide bid ask spreads provided by the market makers.<br />
Market makers are whom options traders really trade options with. When you buy an option, you are really buying directly from market makers who hold an inventory of those options and when you sell options, you are really selling back to these market makers who want to maintain an inventory of those options. Market makers buy and sell options in the exchange, ensuring the liquidity of all options contracts and profit primarily from the bid ask spread that they provide, buying at the bid and selling at the ask. They function exactly like used car dealers, buying at lower prices and selling at higher prices. Typically, the more actively traded the options are, the closer the bid ask spread tend to be due to competition between market makers, however, in times of extreme volatility where there are a lot more buying and selling on panic and more than enough business to go around for all market makers, they usually open up the bid ask spread in order to make even more profits. That is why we saw unusually wide bid ask spreads in this recent crisis. Wider bid ask spreads result in larger upfront losses which again depress the already depressed profitability of stock options due to the higher extrinsic values.<br />
The higher extrinsic value and wider bid ask spread makes profiting from simple stock options buying extremely difficult and are the main reasons why amateur options traders fail to make money buying put options during the recent stock market crisis. Conversely, writing options are an extremely profitable way to trade options during a volatile market where extrinsic values are high. Naked writes and Credit Spreads are really the way to go in a volatile market condition and are what most beginner options traders do not know about. Selling options instead of buying them turns the table around and creates an extremely profitable position during times of high extrinsic value. Learn more about credit spreads at http://www.optiontradingpedia.com/free_debit_credit_spread.htm now. </p>
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		<title>Balance of Risk and Reward in Options Trading</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/balance-of-risk-and-reward-in-options-trading</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/balance-of-risk-and-reward-in-options-trading#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Jan 2010 21:03:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reward]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Risk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Risk Reward Ratio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Options]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://strangleoptions.net/balance-of-risk-and-reward-in-options-trading</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You don&#8217;t need to be a trader or an investor to know that the higher the risk, the greater the reward. This concept is true in all aspects of life and business. The more risk you are willing to undertake in life, the more life returns to you. Indeed, risk and reward are directly proportional [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You don&#8217;t need to be a trader or an investor to know that the higher the risk, the greater the reward. This concept is true in all aspects of life and business. The more risk you are willing to undertake in life, the more life returns to you. Indeed, risk and reward are directly proportional and often in trading and investment, the more risk your account is exposed to, the greater the return on investment when things work out as planned.<br />
Knowing that risk and reward are proportional makes finding the correct balance of risk and reward extremely important to all kinds of traders; stock traders, futures traders, options traders etc. There is no one solution that works for everyone and the correct balance is decided upon the risk appetite and risk tolerance of the individual trader.<br />
For stock traders, balancing risk and reward primarily involves adjusting the amount of growth stocks and defensive stocks in one&#8217;s portfolio. Generally, the more growth or speculative stocks in one&#8217;s portfolio, the greater the risk due to greater uncertainty and therefore the higher the gain when things works out as expected. The more defensive stocks in one&#8217;s portfolio, the more predictable returns become and therefore the lower the return as these stocks does not generally move a lot. This degree of risk / reward balancing is at best crude compared to the surgically fine degree of balancing you can have in options trading.<br />
Stock options are the most versatile trading instrument in the world right now due to the wide array of options strategies that are employable. Yes, not only can risk and reward be balanced through employing different mix of strategies in your portfolio, there are also different risk and reward profiles achievable by each individual options strategy. There are options strategies that range from making over 1000% profit while risking all your money to options strategies that make a mere 0.01% return while risking nothing as well as every centimeters in between.<br />
As long as you understand what your personal risk appetite and risk tolerance is, you will be able to find an options strategy that suits your needs 100%. Here&#8217;s a general outline of the kind of risk reward balance that can be achieved through options trading:<br />
Highest Risk, Highest Reward &#8211; OTM Call / Put buying<br />
This is the options strategy that produces the legendary 1000% profit that amazed so many beginners. What those ads did not tell you is that the risk is losing ALL the money that you put into the strategy. This options strategy involves buying out of the money(http://www.optiontradingpedia.com/out_of_the_money_options.htm)call options when you think a stock is going to go up or buying out of the money put options when you think a stock is going to go down. Professionals use this options strategy with only a very small portion of their money in order to place a bet on an uncertain event such as leveraged buyout. Some lucky amateurs use this options strategy with all their money and then become millionaires overnight. The downside of this strategy is the fact that if the stock did not move far enough in the direction you expected it to, you can lose all the money you put into the strategy. That is also why so many beginners break their accounts overnight in options trading.<br />
Various Degrees of Risk and Reward &#8211; Options Spreads<br />
There are literally hundreds of possible options spread strategies out there with various degrees of risk and reward for every market condition. There are more aggressive bullish, bearish, neutral and volatile spreads and there are more conservative ones. All of them shares the same logic of higher risk compensated with a higher profit potential.<br />
Lowest Risk, Lowest Reward &#8211; Options Arbitrage<br />
Yes, there are literally risk free trading opportunities in options trading which also returns very small, sometimes negligible returns. These are the legendary options arbitrage strategies. Options arbitrage strategies such as conversion/reversal aims to make a fixed return totally risk free through simultaneously buying the underlying and shorting the overpriced synthetic equal or vice versa. The problem with such strategies is that the returns are so low that most of the time, it&#8217;s even lower than the commissions you will pay for the trades made. Even if you manage to return a positive return, the return can be as low as 0.01% in percentage terms. That is why arbitrageurs aim to make an absolute return using enormous amounts of money.<br />
With this in mind, the most conservative traders may choose to specialize totally in arbitrage strategies (http://www.optiontradingpedia.com/options_arbitrage.htm) while the most aggressive traders may choose to specialize in leveraged speculation using OTM options. Everyone else would be able to find something to suit your risk appetite in the hundreds of spread possibilities. This degree of flexibility and range of risk/reward possibilities makes stock options the most versatile trading instrument in the world today and why options trading (http://www.optiontradingpedia.com) is so popular these days. </p>
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		<item>
		<title>Why Trading Stock Options is Better in a Recession</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/why-trading-stock-options-is-better-in-a-recession</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/why-trading-stock-options-is-better-in-a-recession#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jan 2010 09:19:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reward]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Risk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Options]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://strangleoptions.net/why-trading-stock-options-is-better-in-a-recession</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The 2008 recession and stock market crash is the worst financial and economic crisis since the great depression. By Feb 2009, the Dow has dropped almost 50%, erasing all its gains since 1998. In terms of absolute points, the Dow has dropped over 7000 points, which is more than the entire Dow index before 1998. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The 2008 recession and stock market crash is the worst financial and economic crisis since the great depression. By Feb 2009, the Dow has dropped almost 50%, erasing all its gains since 1998. In terms of absolute points, the Dow has dropped over 7000 points, which is more than the entire Dow index before 1998. Without doubt, this stock market crash has rendered many traders and investors helpless in search for profit.<br />
Even though profiting during such market condition is a really tough thing to do, traders and investors still bought stocks in hope of a recovery only to be disappointed again and again leaving a bunch of stocks in deep losses in their account. When money is used this way, what it really does is to rob investors and traders of cash for investing when the real recovery starts.<br />
So, is there a way to place those bets with very little money and limit your losses to negligible amounts if your bet is wrong as it had been so many times in this stock market crash so far? Yes, the answer can be found in stock options trading (http://www.optiontradingpedia.com).<br />
Everyone knows that stock options trading is risky and that you could potentially lose all your money. What everyone failed to recognize is the fact that stock options trading is also a risk limited way of trading for big profits while controlling potential losses to negligible amounts!<br />
Stock options (http://www.optiontradingpedia.com/stock_options.htm) are contracts that allow you to buy a stock at a specific price no matter how high the price of that stock is in the future (Call Options (http://www.optiontradingpedia.com/call_options.htm)) or sell the stock at a specific price no matter how low the price of the stock is in the future (Put Options).<br />
By replacing the buying of the stock with buying its call options, you will be able to control the profits on a stock using just a small amount of money. If the stock goes up, you simply sell the call options for the same profit as you would as if you bought the stocks. If the stock goes down, you lose nothing more than the small amount of money you paid for the call option contract. See where I am going with this? If you had bought only the call options of those stocks that you have bought all of last year, you would have lost only a small fraction of the losses that you would already have incurred through buying the stocks.<br />
Let&#8217;s look at an example.<br />
John and Peter have $15000 to invest with each and they both decided to buy shares of Apple Inc, AAPL, after it has dropped to $141 in October 2008, expecting a rebound. Peter decided to buy 100 shares with $14,100 and John decided to play it conservative and bought 1 contract of AAPL&#8217;s call options with strike price of $140 which was asking at $10.20 for a total price of $1020. 1 contract of call options allows you to control the profit of 100 shares of the underlying stock. In this case, John totally replaced the buying of 100 shares of AAPL with buying 1 contract of its call options. 2 weeks later, AAPL fell all the way to $85 as the recession deepened. Peter lost over $5600 while John lost only the $1020 that he spent buying the call options.<br />
Assuming both Peter and John were right about AAPL and the stock rallies to $200. Peter would have made $5900 in profit while John would have made the same $5900 less the amount of $1020 that he paid for the call options.<br />
See how buying stock options rather than the stock itself in this volatile condition allow you to make a few bets for a rebound without risking all your money? In the above example, Peter would only be able to make one bet once on AAPL with $15,000 while John would have been able to make those same bets more than 10 times at strategic support levels. Who would have a better chance of winning?<br />
By replacing the purchase of stocks with controlling the same number of shares of that stock through its call options, you would definitely have a better chance of survival in this recessionary market condition. Be warned however, that you fully expect to lose the entire amount of money paid on the call options should the stock continue to go down, which is why you NEVER use all your money in a single trade. </p>
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		<title>How to Trade Call Options</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/how-to-trade-call-options</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/how-to-trade-call-options#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 2010 21:15:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Make Money]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal Finance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stock investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Investment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade Call Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade Options]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade Stocks]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The majority of casual investors buy and sell stocks.  If they are bearish on a stock, some will even short-sell stock.  But relatively few investors fully understand and take advantage of trading options.   
  
With stocks, you own a small piece of a company.  However, with options, you purchase the right to buy or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The majority of casual investors buy and sell stocks.  If they are bearish on a stock, some will even short-sell stock.  But relatively few investors fully understand and take advantage of trading options.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>With stocks, you own a small piece of a company.  However, with options, you purchase the right to buy or sell underlying stock.  There are two basic types of options – calls and puts.  When you purchase a call option, you buy the right to purchase a stock at a specific price before a specific date.  When purchasing put options, you buy the right to sell a stock at a specific price before a specific date.  Like stocks, you can both buy and sell options.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>Traders consider buying call options when they are bullish on an underlying stock.  As the stock rises, call options, in general, also rise.  There are, though, some important differences between buying an underlying stock and its call options.  First, options are cheaper than buying the underlying stock.  If you a share of XYZ is $100, it may cost you the same to control 1000 shares with options.  </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>Options are cheaper because they have a strike price and an expiration date.  The strike price of a call option is the price at which you have the right to purchase the stock.  If the price of an underlying stock is above the strike price, the call option is considered “in-the-money.”  If the price of the stock is below the strike price, the call option is “out-of-the-money” while it is “at-the-money” if the stock is the same price as the strike price.  Call options that are in-the-money have inherent value.  For example, let’s say the price of stock XYZ increased to $105.  You, however, own a call option with a strike price of $100.  You thus have the option to buy XYZ at $100 while selling it for $105.  This in-the-money call option thus as an inherent value of $5.  Call options that are at-the-money do not have any inherent value.  For instance, it would not be worth it to exercise a call option with a strike price of $15 because you cannot sell it for a profit.  Call options that are out-of-the-money actually have a negative inherent value since the stock would have to rise just to get to the strike price.  The farther the stock price is from the strike price, the lower the inherent value.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>The expiration date is the time until which you have to exercise your option.  Because options expire, they have a time value.  As the expiration draws nearer, the time value of call options decrease because there is less time for the underlying stock to increase in value.  A call option that expires in a year will therefore have much greater time value than a call option that expires in a week.  The price of options are roughly calculated by: </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>                  Option price = inherent value + time value </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>There are several exit strategies with call options.  If you do nothing and let an option expire, call options that are at-the-money or out-of-the-money will become worthless – they will have no inherent or time value.  However, if a call option is in-the-money at expiration, you can exercise your option for a profit.  Many option trading companies will automatically exercise options that are in-the-money at expiration for you.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>Most option traders, however, have no intention of ever owning the underlying stock.  Traders often sell their options well before expiration.  Call options, in general, increase in value with the underlying stock.  Thus, if a stock rises, you can usually sell a corresponding call option at a profit.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>This can be beneficial because it leverages your capital.  Let’s say you have $1000 to invest.  If a share of XYZ costs $100, you can buy 10 shares.  However, a call option of XYZ, with a strike price of $100, costs only $10.  You can thus alternatively purchase 100 call options of XYZ.  If shares of XYZ go to $105 at expiration, owning the stock would give you a profit of $50.  Owning the options, however, would give you a profit of roughly $500.  The risk in call options, however, is that this increase in price needs to occur before the expiration date.   </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>For more information about trading options, visit DayTradingModels.com </p>
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		<title>Day Trading Software Choices &#8230;Puts You In The Right Call</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/day-trading-software-choices-puts-you-in-the-right-call</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/day-trading-software-choices-puts-you-in-the-right-call#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jan 2010 21:34:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[candlestick charting]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[As a former broker for a few years, in the late 90&#8217;s, I had many of my clients tell me that they couldn’t take advantage of a certain recommendation because they had lost their extra money day trading. Back than the access to sophisticated software programs was limited and also rather costly. Today we are [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As a former broker for a few years, in the late 90&#8217;s, I had many of my clients tell me that they couldn’t take advantage of a certain recommendation because they had lost their extra money day trading. Back than the access to sophisticated software programs was limited and also rather costly. Today we are so inundated with software systems, it’s almost impossible to know where to turn. There is a way to make your decision easier if we break it down into the areas you wish to learn more about. For instance, are you searching for educational help or a better method to track an asset concentrating on its trends? Stock trading has become one of the Internet&#8217;s largest growing activities, not only at the professional level, but as an investment-based extra activity as well. This will also determine which program or system best fills your requirements.To properly consider what software will best suit your needs, we must first determine a mutual understanding. Most investors who use the internet, know about swing trading. If you are not a day trader or long term investor, you are a swing trader. Many so-called experts lump all online traders into the bag of day trading. For the sophisticated observer it is plain to see the obvious differences. A day trader rides the rush of the asset, while a swing trader diagnosis the trends and holds onto it as long as the momentum  last. If we are in agreement on these points than you will be able to comprehend the following suggestions I strongly feel is necessary for any software to be useful.1. It must be able to offer live streaming technical data. (Otherwise the program is merely educational)   2. The platform should defiantly include candlestick charting.3. Visually it has to be large enough for all the data to be seen easily. (Many of the online brokerage’s technical data is to small to be useful) 4. It must be cost effective. (Most good systems can be purchased for between one to two hundred dollars)For those of you not yet familiar with candlestick charting, I will try to give a brief but accurate explanation.  The Chinese invented the market concept, and the Japanese perfected charting techniques with the use of the candlesticks. It is easy to understand this complex system, if we simply break it down to the ticks on the chart you follow everyday. We know that the lower tick is where the stock opened and the higher is where it closed. Now if we made the two lines parallel and connected them, what would we have? A candle. However, during that movement, the stock might have gone lower or higher then where it opened or closed, So our candle has formed a tail and a wick. Is it starting to make a little sense to you? Take these examples: </p>
<p>1. Lets assume a stock opens two cents higher than it closed yesterday. It later closes three cents higher than that. Should we get in? Not necessarily. Because as the candlestick showed us, even though it had a five cent swing from the day before, a long wick was created. This meant that it went even higher then it eventually settled on. That tells us that the pressure to go higher wasn’t strong enough. We will put it on our watch list, and keep a keen eye on it.2.A few days pass with similar results. Suddenly there is a break in the resistance. The stock has formed a candlestick with a long tail. What does this convey? We might put a buy signal for a couple of cents  higher, because the long tail tells us that the bulls are ready to take over.3. Ideally you want to wait for clusters to form. Of course the greatest indicator is a long candle. One that opens and closes with hardly any wick or tail.This synopsis could have very easily taken place over a few hours rather than days, if you were day trading, for example. There are many “characters” in candlestick charting, and those who master reading them become successful. </p>
<p>If you can acquire software that gives you even the slightest edge in your favor, it is well worth the Investment. I don’t profess to being an expert, but I do know of some. I obviously don’t have the time to go into all the details now, but at my site Market Mentalist  you will find all you need to know about investing online. There is access to some of the top trading systems available including software, books, newsletters, and Forums. Whether you are an inquisitive novice or a seasoned pro Market Mentalist offers the online investment resource you just might be seeking. </p>
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		<title>Swing Trading&#8230;Less Pressure Than a Day But Big Rewards</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/swing-trading-less-pressure-than-a-day-but-big-rewards</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/swing-trading-less-pressure-than-a-day-but-big-rewards#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jan 2010 08:58:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[candlestick charting]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Between Day Trade and TrendsIf you are not a day trader or long term investor, you are a swing trader. It usually means you are holding on to a stock for at least a few days, but not more than a few weeks. Swing trading is traditionally considered a low risk venture, especially for thosewho [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between Day Trade and TrendsIf you are not a day trader or long term investor, you are a swing trader. It usually means you are holding on to a stock for at least a few days, but not more than a few weeks. Swing trading is traditionally considered a low risk venture, especially for thosewho trade the large cap stocks. But is there really such things as low risk in these volatile times? Of course you can always just keep shorting the market. I think that can be the most risky in our current atmosphere. Some experts will tell you that swingtrading only works in a stable market, where the prices don’t  fluctuate. I think most regular folk always saw the market as a playground for the big cats. That was until the influx  of trading companies to the internet. So how much investment  capital should you have? To quote the investment companies disclosure, and I’m paraphrasing; “never invest more than you have to lose.” It is like gambling, make no mistake about it. However instead of just rolling the dice, putting your chips all on lucky #7, or hopelessly watching the little pea spin around, you can learn what is the equivalent of counting cards. Before we go any further, I would first like to determine that you are indeed researching swing, and not day trading. All part time traders are swing traders, because you simply can’t monitor an asset that you might want to transact at any second, on a part time basis. These rebels of tradition are literally traders, rather than investors, but can reap huge rewards in a relatively short period of time. This is the itinerary of a day trader. If you can’t commit or don’t have the time to pursue this strategy properly, I suggest you do indeed look into swing trading. Please don’t misunderstand me, swing trading can be a full time job as well, and for thousands it is. You just can’t do day trading part time. </p>
<p>Make no mistake however, in both strategies as with anything connected with investments, you had better be knowledgeable. Always have an exit plan or stop loss in place and it is essential that you have an excellent technical charting platform.   Knowledge and Training Lead to ConfidenceConfidence Leads to ProfitLet us assume that you have some knowledge or you wouldn’t be researching the market. Any training you receive should be for technical analysis, or you are just wasting time and money. As far as software platforms, the following suggestions I strongly feel are necessary for any software to be useful.1. It must be able to offer live streaming technical data.    (Otherwise the program is merely educational)   2. The platform should defiantly include candlestick charting.3. Visually it has to be large enough for all the data to be seen easily. (Many of the online brokerage’s technical data are too small to be useful) 4. It must be cost effective. (Most good systems can be purchased for between one and two hundred dollars)Let the Candles Light Your WayInclude Candlestick Charting for Even Greater ProfitsFor those of you not yet familiar with candlestick charting, I will try to give a brief but accurate explanation.  The Chinese invented the market concept, and the Japanese perfected charting techniques with the use of the candlesticks. It is easy to understand this complex system, if we simply break it down to the ticks on the chart you follow every day. We know that the lower tick is where the stock opened and the higher is where it closed. Now if we made the two lines parallel and connected them, what would we have? A candle. However, during that movement, the stock might have gone lower or higher then where it opened or closed, So our candle has formed a tail and a wick. Is it starting to make a little sense to you? Can you see the advantage of knowing this information, for getting in and out, and setting a stop loss?I don’t profess to being an expert, but I do know of some. I obviously don’t have the time to go into all the details now, but at my site  Market Mentalist you will find all you need to know about investing online. There is access to some of the top trading systems available including software, books, newsletters, and Forums. Whether you are an inquisitive novice or a seasoned pro Market Mentalist offers the online investment resource you just might be seeking. </p>
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		<title>Stock Market Trading Software&#8230;Up Or Down You Make Money</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/stock-market-trading-software-up-or-down-you-make-money</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/stock-market-trading-software-up-or-down-you-make-money#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Jan 2010 21:31:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[candlestick charting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Currency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Day Trading]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[These Fundamentals Aren’t TechnicalI believe in order to lay a solid foundation for  successful trading, there are three basic fundamentals you must adhere to. The first is knowledge. There are only three things really that separate us from an expert. Training and experience comes after knowledge. Knowledge comes first, and expertise is accomplished through experience [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>These Fundamentals Aren’t TechnicalI believe in order to lay a solid foundation for  successful trading, there are three basic fundamentals you must adhere to. The first is knowledge. There are only three things really that separate us from an expert. Training and experience comes after knowledge. Knowledge comes first, and expertise is accomplished through experience and constant training. So, how knowledgeable are you?  Let us assume that you have some knowledge or you wouldn’t be researching the market. Do you know the difference between day trading and swing trading? To me there is a major difference. Many so-called experts lump all online traders into the bag of day trading. For the sophisticated observer it is plain to see the obvious differences. A day trader rides the rush of the asset, while a swing trader diagnosis the trends and holds onto it as long as the momentum  last. Knowing these subtle nuances will determine what kind of software you need.Training encompasses a lot of different meanings. For our purposes I want to address technical analysis. I strongly feel any trader not taking advantage of the immense knowledge gained from technical charts is wasting time and money. Of course the fundamentals are important. They are much more important to the investor than the trader, however. A company’s financials don’t matter a great deal if you are planning on dumping the asset in a few minutes, a day, or a week. If there was any news about the company’s financials, believe me you would see it reflected on the technical charts.Use Software for Your AdvantageA Solid Platform to Build Your WealthNow based upon the idea that my assumptions are accurate, and you are still with me, as far as software platforms, the following suggestions I strongly feel are necessary for any software to be useful.1. It must be able to offer live streaming technical data.    (Otherwise the program is merely educational)   2. The platform should defiantly include candlestick charting.3. Visually it has to be large enough for all the data to be seen easily. (Many of the online brokerage’s technical data is to small to be useful) 4. It must be cost effective. (Most good systems can be purchased for between one to two hundred dollars)More on Candlestick ChartingA Candle Burns Bright in Your FutureFor those of you not yet familiar with candlestick charting, I will try to give a brief but accurate explanation.  The Chinese invented the market concept, and the Japanese perfected charting techniques with the use of the candlesticks. It is easy to understand this complex system, if we simply break it down to the ticks on the chart you follow every day. We know that the lower tick is where the stock opened and the higher is where it closed. Now if we made the two lines parallel and connected them, what would we have? A candle. However, during that movement, the stock might have gone lower or higher then where it opened or closed, so our candle has formed a tail and a wick. Is it starting to make a little sense to you? Can you see the advantage of knowing this information, for getting in and out, and setting a stop loss?Take these examples:  1. Lets assume a stock opens twenty cents higher than it closed yesterday. It later closes ten cents higher than that. Should we get in? Not necessarily. Because as the candlestick showed us, even though it had a thirty-cent swing from the day before, a long wick was created. This meant that it went even higher then it eventually settled on. That tells us that the pressure to go higher wasn’t strong enough. We will put it on our watch list, and keep a keen eye on it.2.A few days passes with similar results. Suddenly there is a break in the resistance. The stock has formed a candlestick with a long tail. What does this convey? We might put a buy signal for a couple of cents  higher than it has previously gone, because the long tail tells us that the bulls are ready to take over.3. Ideally you want to wait for clusters to form. Of course the greatest indicator is a long candle. One that opens and closes with hardly any wick or tail.This synopsis could have very easily taken place over a few hours rather than days, if you were day trading, for example. There are many “characters” in candlestick charting, and those who master reading them become successful.If you can acquire software that gives you even the slightest edge in your favor, it is well worth the Investment. I don’t profess to being an expert, but I do know of some. I obviously don’t have the time to go into all the details now, but at my site          Market Mentalist  you will find all you need to know about investing online. There is access to some of the top trading systems available including software, books, newsletters, and Forums. Whether you are an inquisitive novice or a seasoned pro Market Mentalist offers the online investment resource you just might be seeking. </p>
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		<title>Trading Gold&#8230;This Precious Metal Will Continue to Shine</title>
		<link>http://strangleoptions.net/trading-gold-this-precious-metal-will-continue-to-shine</link>
		<comments>http://strangleoptions.net/trading-gold-this-precious-metal-will-continue-to-shine#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Jan 2010 09:11:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buying Gold]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[All Portfolios Should Contain a Percentage of GoldAnyone who can afford to should own gold. There are many legal ways of having  gold, however, it comes down to either physically possessing it, or owning shares on paper. Most experts agree that taking physical possession of gold is a good idea as a bet against inflation. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>All Portfolios Should Contain a Percentage of GoldAnyone who can afford to should own gold. There are many legal ways of having  gold, however, it comes down to either physically possessing it, or owning shares on paper. Most experts agree that taking physical possession of gold is a good idea as a bet against inflation. There are two ways to own real physical gold, and most people who do, I feel are purchasing it in the wrong form. Gold bullion in the form of small bars or coins is the preferred method by most buyers. The reason why I feel it is a mistake to own gold in this manner is twofold. First of all gold is a commodity, and as such restricted by regulations of any commodity. The second reason has to do with history. In 1933 all but $100 of the non collectible gold was confiscated by the government when we went off the gold standard. With the world in its current financial turmoil there are many that believe that the inflation that will follow a recovery might force us back into a gold standard. If that happens anyone in possession of gold bullion will get a fair market price for it, and than it will be confiscated.On the other hand, if you own, what is deemed as rare or collectible gold it cannot be confiscated. In fact this kind of asset is considered private, and is no ones’ business but yours. Yes you pay a premium for it, but in the long run it will be worth it. It doesn’t have to be old to be considered  collectible. All proof bullion coins also fall into that category. Let us assume that at the turn of this century you purchased a one ounce American gold eagle and a one ounce eagle proof. Today your gold eagle, which you bought for approximately $350, is worth three times that much. While the proof that you paid approximately $500 for, is now valued at four or five times what you paid for it. For those of you looking into buying physical gold, you might want to consider this. It is my understanding that the U.S. mint has temporarily suspended the manufacturing of proof coins, but there are many dealers that still offer them.For traders, there are many avenues to take when looking into trading gold. If you are looking for a day trade, the gold index seems to fluctuate enough, that with the right technical charting you should be able to make excellent profits on a daily basis. There are many goldmine stocks that, if charted correctly can be swing traded very successfully. I don’t do a lot of futures trading, but it seems to be that until gold breaks the thousand plus resistance, the future will be very much as it is in the present. Many experts see gold topping the two thousand per ounce mark, but so far there are no indications of that happening in the near future.Good Charting Can Be Compared to a Treasure MapThere is Gold in Them Thar Technical’sAs I mentioned, precise technical charting is the key that will unlock that treasure chest of gold. In fact, it will greatly increase profits in any trading you pursue. Let us assume that you have some knowledge or you wouldn’t be researching the market. Any training you receive should be for technical analysis, or you are just wasting time and money. As far as software platforms, the following suggestions I strongly feel are necessary for any software to be useful.1. It must be able to offer live streaming technical data.    (Otherwise the program is merely educational)   2. The platform should defiantly include candlestick charting.3. Visually it has to be large enough for all the data to be seen easily. (Many of the online brokerage’s technical data is too small to be useful) 4. It must be cost effective. (Most good systems can be purchased for between one and two hundred dollars)Use a Candle to Light Your Golden WayCandlestick Charting is a Goldmine of Wealth For those of you not yet familiar with candlestick charting, I will try to give a brief but accurate explanation.  The Chinese invented the market concept, and the Japanese perfected charting techniques with the use of the candlesticks. It is easy to understand this complex system, if we simply break it down to the ticks on the chart you follow every day. We know that the lower tick is where the stock opened and the higher is where it closed. Now if we made the two lines parallel and connected them, what would we have? A candle. However, during that movement, the stock might have gone lower or higher then where it opened or closed, so our candle has formed a tail and a wick. Is it starting to make a little sense to you? Can you see the advantage of knowing this information, for getting in and out, and setting a stop loss?I don’t profess to being an expert, but I do know of some. I obviously don’t have the time to go into all the details now, but at my site  Market Mentalist  you will find all you need to know about investing online. There is access to some of the top trading systems available including software, books, newsletters, and Forums. Whether you are an inquisitive novice or a seasoned pro Market Mentalist offers the online investment resource, you just might be seeking. </p>
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