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-   -   selling covered options vs uncoverd options (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=160524)

Glenn 12-20-2004 01:18 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
I don't have a job. So when I say you have no idea what you are talking about does it mean more?

Paluka 12-20-2004 01:20 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
Some people's jobs involve buying and selling options for a living. I would think that would make them more qualified to talk about this, not less.

James282 12-25-2004 11:43 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
[ QUOTE ]
Some people's jobs involve buying and selling options for a living. I would think that would make them more qualified to talk about this, not less.

[/ QUOTE ]

These same people also use logic and consistency when they discuss things, instead of making blanket statements like "i have no job, therefore I am an expert."
I also don't have a job, but I admit that I know pretty much nothing about investing compared to most of you. I can't for the life of me understand wtf this "goodedesign" person is trying to claim.
-James

goodedesign 12-26-2004 03:42 PM

Post deleted by Mat Sklansky
 

Paluka 12-27-2004 12:39 AM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
[ QUOTE ]
1, i never claimed to be an expert. read the entirity of the posts.
i simply state that (in this thread) there are multiple ways to use the covered/naked calls to maximize your profit. however, paluka and others seem ti think that there must only be their way. no, try this on for size. when you know how a stock moves within reason, use naked and covered calls in tandem. converting a $X.00 move into an $X.00 * 3 move.

[/ QUOTE ]

What in the world are you talking about? The only thing that I have claimed is that you are sprouting gibberish. And stop asking me if I have a job. I am a professional trader. Most of your examples of making money off options have nothign to do with your options trades- they are examples of you making money because you got long a stock and they stock price skyrocketed. If you are able to know which stocks are going to rise dramatically in the future you don't need some fancy options strategy to make money. One of your examples that included an options trade you actually arbed yourself for a loss. You do not know what you are talking about, stop trying to mislead people.

stoxtrader 12-28-2004 03:37 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
Paluka knows his sh!t.

trading options is a negative sum game after factoring in frictional costs. Are you better than the next guy?

goodedesign 12-31-2004 12:16 AM

Post deleted by Mat Sklansky
 

sfer 01-04-2005 12:16 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
My strategy is to buy low and sell high.

I also take out tiny classified ads.

Mark1808 01-04-2005 02:09 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
Just because a strategy is making you money does not mean it is correct. If I flip heads 5 times in a row, this does not make me an expert coin flipper. Any rate of return over T Bills entails risk and this includes exotic option stratagies. Making excess returns selling options is greatly dependent on your ability to find options whose implied volitility is much higher than it should be. Good luck doing that when greater minds with more capital and lower trading costs than we have are beating us to the punch and efficently pricing the market. When Ed Thorpe wrote "Beat the Market" warrants were way over priced and pricing models had not yet been widely used. Selling overpriced warrants naked was therefore a wildly profitable strategy. Now finding mis-priced options is impossible for the individual investor. Options are only a tool for adjusting your risk exposure. If you are making money selling naked options that's great, but your return carries with it a commensurate risk.

Redsox 01-04-2005 06:58 PM

Re: selling covered options vs uncoverd options
 
There are many good books that can be read about options and their pricing. I think that people here mean well, and some of the information is quite ok, but there is also a bit of "guesswork" and out and out falsehoods being told to you. Selling puts is actually far riskier. Puts do not trade higher because people buy puts and sell calls. Puts trade higher because market returns are negatively skewed, meaning that most days on the market are up days, but most large moves (e.g. more than 2 or 3 standard devs.) tend to be down moves. So market makers and specialists require increased insurance against this downward move. This is also why selling naked puts is usually riskier than selling calls. Even though stocks could in theory go as high as they want, the actual truth of market dynamics is that a large downward move (usually timed with market information such as earnings, an FDA approval, etc.) is far more likely. There are also other considerations on option pricing. Options are priced based on the dividends and interest rates applied to the underlying stock. Some stocks are "impossible to borrow" meaning that they cannot be sold short, so there is a tremendous "pump" put into the value of the put because no one wants to sell it. But the most important pricing consideration of an option is the volatility of the underlying. The more volatile a stock is, the more expensive the options are. So you can really sell some expensive puts on books like GOOG, KMRT, TASR, etc. But there is a reason for this. These stocks move dollars at a clip, and are very dangerous, even for the professionals.

Lastly, selling covered options is a bit of a misnomer. Selling a call and buying the stock is nothing more than selling a synthetic put, and selling a put and selling stock against it is nothing more than a synthetic call. Think about a position. Buy the stock and sell the call. If the stock drops, call ends up out of the money and you still control the stock after expiration. But you lose on the long stock position the whole way down, same as if you just sold the put. The situation would be different if, for instance, you already owned the stock, and were planning on holding it long term no matter what. In that case, selling the call would be ok. Market makers on the floor of America's exchanges are professionals who have been working at their "craft" for a long long time. Your money being saved for retirement is too valuable. No one ever got really rich by diversifying small amounts of money. But no one went broke that way either. Just like at a poker table, there is no "free money" in the world. My advice to you is to leave the options trading alone, and to invest in mutual funds and ETFs which are highly diversified.

Good Luck,

Eric


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