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- 11 November 2006
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wayneL said:A note on leverage folks
Just because it's there, doesn't mean you have to use it all.
I trade futures which is the same deal leverage-wise. If you use some sort of prudent MM, it will be nearly impossible to use too much leverage, otherwise you ARE gambling
The real advantage of CFD's is the ability to short IMO.
MichaelD said:When traded using a positive expectancy system, CFDs are not gambling, but leverage. Leverage increases profits but it also increases DRAWDOWN. Twice the profits means twice the drawdown for the same system.
CFDs allow sufficient leverage that you can trade a system where the maximum drawdown is guaranteed to reach 100% at some point in time - i.e. trade with maximum leverage and you will blow up your account sooner or later.
They also nip away at your capital in various other ways, but that is beside the point.
Just because they give you the opportunity to easily blow up your account shouldn't mean that you do so.
Flathead Flick said:Can't believe I didn't know about this earlier. Are there any other chat rooms around I don't know about???
rhmt01 said:Has anyone tried using CFD's to write covered puts (or short collars - instead of the normal long collar)?
Also on this issue, what is the best CFD short rate around? Best I've seen is 6.25% minus 2%.
I'm thinking:
an income of $11/day in interest per $100,000 plus your net credit in time decay.
sell ATM put, short 1,000 and buy a slightly OTM call.
Oh while your at it you lodge interest rate securities as collateral for options. (and I believe one (first prudential comes to mind) or two CFD providers allow you to lodge stock as collateral these days as well)... So thats another 7 or so % fully franked on the collateral (and most interest rate securities only have a 20% haircut)... giving you more bang for your buck
any thoughts?
rhmt01 said:Has anyone tried using CFD's to write covered puts (or short collars - instead of the normal long collar)?
Also on this issue, what is the best CFD short rate around? Best I've seen is 6.25% minus 2%.
I'm thinking:
an income of $11/day in interest per $100,000 plus your net credit in time decay.
sell ATM put, short 1,000 and buy a slightly OTM call.
Oh while your at it you lodge interest rate securities as collateral for options. (and I believe one (first prudential comes to mind) or two CFD providers allow you to lodge stock as collateral these days as well)... So thats another 7 or so % fully franked on the collateral (and most interest rate securities only have a 20% haircut)... giving you more bang for your buck
any thoughts?
swingstar said:Any investment is a gamble if you haven't done the work required to know if the probabilities are on your side. Doesn't matter what the market or instrument is.
Flathead Flick said:I dunno swingstar, you still haven't convinced me that someone trading CFDs is any different to the guy down at the local TAB (let's call him Frank).
Just because you do some work to figure out if the probabilities are on your side, that doesn't necessarily mean that you're not just 'putting it on the nose'. I'm sure Frank does his research, looks at past performance, current manager, prevailing conditions and the odds before he places a bet (and this is probably more than many CFD traders do).
I can't see how that is any different to what we do - except that we cloak it in jargon.
FF
It's Snake Pliskin said:The key differences are the professional mindset vs the gambling mindset; money management and risk managment vs double or nothings (martingale gambling); and in trading you get at least some money back vs in gambling you DON'T.
But all participants may not operate in a truly professional way. True there are those just gambling on the direction of price. To say that going to the tab is the same, though, is quite ridiculous.
Flathead Flick said:I dunno swingstar, you still haven't convinced me that someone trading CFDs is any different to the guy down at the local TAB (let's call him Frank).
Just because you do some work to figure out if the probabilities are on your side, that doesn't necessarily mean that you're not just 'putting it on the nose'. I'm sure Frank does his research, looks at past performance, current manager, prevailing conditions and the odds before he places a bet (and this is probably more than many CFD traders do).
I can't see how that is any different to what we do - except that we cloak it in jargon.
FF
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