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	<title>Hedging Options &#187; Stock Option Trading</title>
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		<title>How to Trade â Book Review &#8211; Kenneth L. Grant, Trading Risk</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/how-to-trade-a%c2%80%c2%93-book-review-kenneth-l-grant-trading-risk</link>
		<comments>http://hedgingoptions.net/how-to-trade-a%c2%80%c2%93-book-review-kenneth-l-grant-trading-risk#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Dec 2009 19:25:28 +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>How to Trade Options â Diversified Trading Stock Options but Still Suffering Concentration Risk</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/how-to-trade-options-a%c2%80%c2%93-diversified-trading-stock-options-but-still-suffering-concentration-risk</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Dec 2009 20:27:01 +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[Options Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portfolio Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Applying a more complete definition of diversification can help retail option traders diversify their portfolio profitably, beyond equities.A buddy started online options trading from home, in the last 6 months. He was trading a mix of Verticals, Calendars and Iron Condors using highly liquid Indexes but was failing to get consistent profits.Â  Naturally, I asked, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Applying a more complete definition of diversification can help retail option traders diversify their portfolio profitably, beyond equities.A buddy started online options trading from home, in the last 6 months. He was trading a mix of Verticals, Calendars and Iron Condors using highly liquid Indexes but was failing to get consistent profits.Â  Naturally, I asked, âWhich Indexes?âHe answered, âDJX, DIA, MNX, QQQQ, RUT, SMH, SPY and XSP.Â  Iâve incorporated broad-based Indexing across large, mid and small-cap stocks to remove single stock exposure.Â  Having learnt how to trade options with Verticals, Calendars and Iron Condors, Iâm spreading across these various Indexes. Iâm being careful with money management, 2%-5% per trade, Iâve diversified risk, yes?âNo. He has partially diversified a portion within his portfolio; but, is still suffering concentration risk.Â  All he has really done is allocate capital across multiple products, using various option spread types; yet, all his trading capital is stuck in equities.In choosing the MNX, QQQQ, SMH, SPY and XSP, there is a duplication of stock components in these Indexes: for example, AMAT (Applied Materials) is a component of all 5 Indexes.Â  Bear in mind the MNX and the QQQQ are both smaller versions of the Nasdaq100 Index, the only difference being the MNX is an European styled cash settled Index and the cubes (QQQQ) is an American style stock settled Index.Â  Another example, Apple (AAPL) is a component of the MNX/QQQQ and SPY/XSP &#8211; both the SPY and the XSP track the S&amp;P 500, the SPY is American style stock settled and the XSP is European style cash settled.Â  Duplication is not diversification.Â  Even if you allocated capital to the smaller versions of the Dow: DJX, the European style cash settled version of the DIA which is the American style stock settled version.Â  Moreover, if you extended capital allocation to trade the RUT, thinking you are diversifying into small-cap stocks and away from large-caps, you just sunk more of your trading capital into equities.Â  Again, you cannot achieve diversification by adding more capital in the same asset class.Â  That is concentration risk in stocks. Do not confuse asset category (market capitalization) with asset class.Why bother diversifying across Asset Classes? To answer this question, Iâll use an example of a well known traded stock:Â  Apple (AAPL).Â  You wonât need to understand Fundamental Analysis to follow the reasoning.Summarizing a financial extract from its Annual Report, Apple has almost ~30% of its Net Sales distributed across: UK, France, Germany, Spain &amp; Ireland and Japan.Â  Appleâs customers in Europe are paying in EUR/GBP and customers in Japan will be paying in JPY.Â  Even though you are trading Apple directly as a US parented firm listed in the US and the currency of the parent is USD denominated, the company has currency exposure to the EUR/GBP and JPY arising from operating sales entities in those jurisdictions.Â  So, you are already exposed to currency and geographic risks by choosing Apple as a product to trade, even though you are constructing an option trade on the stock.So, it makes sense, rather than have these exposures wrapped inside the stock, where you are subordinating non-equity risks to the stock, to deliberately surface the risks in Geography, Commodities and Currencies.Â  Then, isolate these elements and trade them directly using optionable Geographic ETFs, Commodity ETFs and Currency ETFs.Is there an example of a consistently profitable and diversified portfolio to see the merits of trading options beyond equities? Yes.Â  Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ to learn how to trade options using a multi-asset class set up.Â  Notice how the profits step up gradually, from the mid hundreds to the higher hundreds; then, from the higher hundreds into the thousands.Â  While, the losses are contained within the mid to lower hundreds.Â  Diversification to trade options in non-stock asset classes using Geographic ETFs, Commodity ETFs and Currency ETFs, deliberately dilutes the concentration risk in the portfolioâs P/L.If you are puzzled, yet intrigued, you may well ask, âI donât need to Beta-weight the Deltas of my option positions; then, hedge using Futures?Â  Do I need to adjust my existing positions by embedding single options; or, morph the original spread into a hybrid option strategy?âNo, is the answer to both questions. Just as it would not make sense within stocks to say Beta-weight a company like GE to the SMH (Semiconductors Holdrs), there is even less sense to Beta-weight a broad-based Index like the SPY to an Emerging Market ETF, Commodity ETF or Currency ETF.Â  Diversification is designed to break the commonality in correlation between the asset price movements of products, in the retail traderâs portfolio structured for online options trading.Â  Adjustments fail to provide the consistency in laddering up the profits as seen in the portfolio, because an adjusted trade often fails to restore, let alone improve the original profile of the tradeâs volatility and probability that was bought or sold.How is this possible? Volatility can be added to/reduced from the portfolio, as not all Asset Classes or Sectors or Individual Companies or Countries move up/down in value ALL at the same time; and/or, ALL at the same rate. It is the volatility level across various asset classes that is targeted for diversification.To conclude, hereâs the point to reflect on.Â  While diversification alone does not guarantee a profitable portfolio, do you think you are diversified trading stock options but still suffering concentration risk? Think deeper. </p>
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		<title>Options Trading Strategies â Intermarket Analysis in Brief for Retail Asset Allocation</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/options-trading-strategies-a%c2%80%c2%93-intermarket-analysis-in-brief-for-retail-asset-allocation</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Dec 2009 18:55:22 +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[Intermarket Analysis.intermarket]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Options Trading Strategies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portfolio Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[If you are trading a mix of Verticals, Calendars and Iron Condors across highly liquid indexes like the DJX, DIA, MNX, QQQQ, RUT, SMH, SPY and XSP, is your trading risk adequately diversified? No.In choosing the MNX, QQQQ, SMH, SPY and XSP, there is a duplication of stock components in these Indexes: for example, AMAT [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you are trading a mix of Verticals, Calendars and Iron Condors across highly liquid indexes like the DJX, DIA, MNX, QQQQ, RUT, SMH, SPY and XSP, is your trading risk adequately diversified? No.In choosing the MNX, QQQQ, SMH, SPY and XSP, there is a duplication of stock components in these Indexes: for example, AMAT (Applied Materials) is a component of all 5 Indexes.Â  Bear in mind the MNX and the QQQQ are both smaller versions of the Nasdaq100 Index, the only difference being the MNX is an European styled cash settled Index and the cubes (QQQQ) is an American style stock settled Index.Â  Another example, Apple (AAPL) is a component of the MNX/QQQQ and SPY/XSP &#8211; both the SPY and the XSP track the S&amp;P 500, the SPY is American style stock settled and the XSP is European style cash settled.Â  Duplication is not diversification.Â  Even if you allocated capital to the smaller versions of the Dow: DJX, the European style cash settled version of the DIA which is the American style stock settled version.Â  Moreover, if you extended capital allocation to trade the RUT, thinking you are diversifying into small-cap stocks and away from large-caps, you just sunk more of your trading capital into equities.Â  Again, you cannot achieve diversification by adding more capital in the same asset class.Â  You need to learn how to trade options without concentration risk in stocks.Â  Do not confuse asset category (market capitalization) with asset class.This is where there is a need to understand Intermarket relationships.Â  Intermarket analysis requires the simultaneous analysis of 4 main Asset Classes: Currencies (U.S. Dollar remains most liquid of all major traded currencies), Commodities, Bonds and Stocks.Â  Synchronizing the rotation of asset allocation within your own portfolio lies in getting a grip on how these four markets interrelate with each other.Hereâs the synopsis of the relationships.Â  Commodities lead bonds, bonds lead stocks and stocks lead commodities.Â  The cycle holds true at least in a normal inflationary/disinflationary environment.Â  Other than itself, Commodities affects 2 markets (Bonds and Stocks); effectively, impacting 3 out of the 4 Intermarket relationships.Â  Even if you do not trade Commodity ETFs as part of your portfolio, you need to track Commodities as a leading economic cycle indicator.Â  The futures/Mini Futures that you see on news headlines/trading screens are relevant only as daily gauges for stock market behaviour.Â  They are not a cycle indicator across Asset Classes.So, you may already understand the criteria to define a &#8220;normal&#8221; economic cycle for the Directional Relationships to behave &#8220;ideally&#8221; (see below); BUT, how do you determine which Asset Class is driving the cycle? In other words, at a given point in the Intermarket cycle, how do you determine which Asset Class has the DOMINANT Relative Strength to trade? Follow the link below for a video-based course, to learn how Relative Strength &#8211; a rotational algorithmic measure is used to replace conventional Fundamental Analysis, as an asset allocation technique.Moving on, hereâs the Business Cycle in brief.Â  Bonds lead stocks, to trend in the same direction â except during deflation when bonds rise and stocks fall.Â  On average bonds are 18 months ahead of stocks in rising to their peak or falling to their bottoms; thereafter, stocks follow in the same direction.Â  If bonds have not broken down yet, this extends the gains in the stock market, acting as support for prevailing stock market levels.Â  The real risk begins to build 5-7 months after the bond market peaks or bottoms, thereafter the next 6 months stocks accelerate in the direction bonds have set.Typically, commodities and bonds have an inverse relationship: as commodities rise, bonds falls but as commodities fall, bonds rise. Inflationary expectations affect bond prices. US Dollar movements which is tied into Monetary Policy changes affects commodity prices.Â  Commodities lead bonds 12â18 months in advance (it takes this long for Monetary Policy to come into effect) and 24â27 months before the economy fully absorbs the policy changes.Now, the relationship between commodities and stocks. Stocks tend to lead commodities. Commodities are a hedge against inflation, with price inflation and higher inflation expectations occurring towards the end of the business cycle.Money and company growth using credit (loans) takes time to make its way through the economic system, from making prices rise to raising expectations on inflation. Thus, commodities usually outperform at the end of the business cycle.Rising bond prices generally raise stock prices in recovery, with falling commodity prices confirming an economic expansion phase is in play. As the expansion matures and begins to decelerate, watch for bonds to turn down first (as interest rates rise), followed by stocks.Finally, it is after commodities outperform stocks and start turning down, this signals the end of an economic expansion with the probable start of activity decelerating, then slipping into an impending recession.Retail traders can keep reading about the economics of interâmarket analysis and asset diversification. Though, they will not solve these key issues, every option trader trading with USD $25-$50K or less, must deal with for retail asset allocation purposes: </p>
<p>&#8230; if you can afford to diversify &#8230; </p>
<p>Where can I learn how to trade options profitably using Intermarket analysis with retail asset allocation methods? Follow the link below, entitled âConsistent Resultsâ to see a profitable retail option traderâs portfolio that is set up to cycle in and cycle out of Intermarket relationships, between asset classes.Why is it possible? Iâm using optionable ETFs (Commodity, Currency, Emerging Market and REIT), as well as optionable broad based/sector Equity Indexes, to trade the volatilities of each respective asset class. I do not need to trade Commodities and Currencies directly.Â  Remember, volatility can be added to/reduced from the portfolio, as not all Asset Classes or Sectors or Individual Companies or Countries move up/down in value ALL at the same time; and/or, ALL at the same rate. </p>
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		<title>Stock Option Trading â Candlesticks &amp; OHLC Bars Lose their Patterns on a Distribution Curve</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/stock-option-trading-a%c2%80%c2%93-candlesticks-ohlc-bars-lose-their-patterns-on-a-distribution-curve</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Dec 2009 07:48:03 +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>Tips for Better Options Trading</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/tips-for-better-options-trading</link>
		<comments>http://hedgingoptions.net/tips-for-better-options-trading#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 2009 09:16:11 +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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		<title>Stock Option Trading Guide for Beginner</title>
		<link>http://hedgingoptions.net/stock-option-trading-guide-for-beginner</link>
		<comments>http://hedgingoptions.net/stock-option-trading-guide-for-beginner#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Nov 2009 08:29:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Option Trading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Option Trading]]></category>

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		<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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