- Joined
- 23 October 2009
- Posts
- 2
- Reactions
- 0
Hi all,
I am new to options trading so am just playing offline for now. From what I can see there are only a selection of companies trading on the options side of things?? Assuming I haven't misunderstood is there somewhere I can get a list of all companies that are actively traded.
Finally from what I see even very basic/simple options trading makes more sense to me than traditionally buying and selling shares directly which is what I am used to. Is there a reason it is not real popular method of investing to the every day aussie?
Thanks
. Is there a reason it is not real popular method of investing to the every day aussie?
Beats the hell out of me, you can literally get 100% one day ROI without any leverage.
And you can just as easily lose 80% every day for a week
Assuming I haven't misunderstood is there somewhere I can get a list of all companies that are actively traded.
Beats the hell out of me, you can literally get 100% one day ROI without any leverage.
Only if you are really really dumb. And have some problem pulling out of a clearly bad position.
Only if you are really really dumb. And have some problem pulling out of a clearly bad position.
If you are so smart, can you explain to me the advantages and disadvantages of options and futures for day trading and why you are using options instead of futures?
Actually no, I'm not smart enough to answer that:
However I may not exactly be day trade either (depending on how you define it). My positions last from one to a few days.
I only started with options about 2-3 trading weeks ago and already I'm up 300% on my portfolio (no joking), so it can't be that bloody hard. Considering that no managed fund in stocks or property has gotten this sort of a return even cumulatively in the last decade...
I may move into futures in the future, just have to take it a bit slow and learn things properly. For now they look rather scary, overnight futures jump up and down wildly for seemingly no reason (or better to say I don't understand the reasons a lot of the time), whereas I feel much more confident predicting how the market is going to open the following day.
Likewise when I said it's not leveraged, I meant that you can never be liable for more than what you put in (this is buying ETOs once again). So even though you may lose 80% if you very badly misread the market or something extreme and unexpected happens - at the very least you can't lose money you didn't have in the first place.
Sure, but I doubt people who trade hundreds of millions of dollars would come asking for help here - or at the least people who are new to it would not be trading so much, so it hardly applies in OP's case.
I was referring to your 300% claim, not OPs query.
Well we'll see. Theoretically with ETOs, all you need to do is get more % difference correct than incorrect, and the more so the money you make. Isn't that right?
For an index like the asx200, this is surely very possible, you must admit. I still have not had a single losing position out of about 7 I think.
Well I'm not bragging saying I can be the world's most successful fund manager. But while I don't have much capital, surely this is the best way to build it up before investing in other things which have far more volume and liquidity?
Do you disagree?
So please once again elaborate as to what you recommend I do, within the context of taking advantage of the same positions as I am taking now.
Additionally, how much money would you say is enough before reviewing the risk parameters? $1m? More?
Unless of course you are considering and trying to trade the non-linear aspects of options (AKA The Greeks).
But then you'd spreading and morphing rather than being long only all the time.
What do you mean by this?
Do you know what happens to the value of your long call after a day, if the underlying hasn't moved at all and why this is so?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?