clancyfish said:Hi all,
I went to an optionetics free seminar (2hrs) yesterday for interests sake only and no intention of signing up for their $4,000 course. It was an interesting to see this guy from the States doing an extremely hard sell on their product. He basically spent 2 hours convincing every one that they could make a minimum of $50,000 a year and if you work up to 10 hrs a week on option, you could be looking at making $250,000. He made the statement that because options are a leveraged instrument, the option will increase considerably more in value than the actual movement in the underlying share, so basically with a straddle you just can't lose unless it goes sideway and then you get out with a 15% loss.
What was sad about this whole event was that 60% of the audience would have been in their 70's and a few of them signed up. The guy was really pressurising everyone by saying 'what part didn't you get about making lots of money?' when most of us didn't sign up.
oh well, predators everywhere.
DTM said:Yes totally agree that its not worth the money. They sell on the greed factor and "you could be rich too with little or no work at all". Unfortunately I was sucked in to spending thousands when a $30 book would have taught me more.
RichKid said:Hey DTM!
Haven't seen you here for a loooong time! Hope all is well and that your trading education is going well.
I find that worked examples are the best way to learn, Wayne's threads have been one of the best (thanks Wayne!), we've also got Magdoran willing to help people out so maybe more people will migrate from those crooks promising everything. Guy Bower's book has lots of sample questions and answers too. I really do feel sorry for these older people who may not recover from a catastrophic loss, ASIC should be sending observers to these meetings the same way Fair Trading and ACCC send people to check on businesses. Do we have to wait for another financial tragedy before they act? There will be many victims once this bullmarket is over...
Hopeful said:Oh, you got the same mail I did , something like "claim your free gift now!" only to waste my time opening it to find that I have to pay them thousands of dollars to recieve my free gift. What is this wonderful gift you ask? It's a "discount", well gee thanks a lot.
I've got Fontanills' book already which I'm sure covers everything the seminar does, so why would anyone spend $ooo for something you can get for less than $100? Not to mention the many good free webinars out there. Why pay so much for it? Me no understand.
Howdy Jacobite,As a beginner, I still feel that Options as a concept is worth exploring more and could give some good return, so I will turn to the recommended books now and not to Optionetrics.
I've almost finished listening to the (borrowed) optionetics cd's, and I've found them really good. But I have my reasons. There's a few important lessons I've learnt.
1. How to separate the marketing bull from the actual information (I think). I was a pretty reasonable salesman in a former life, and these guys can sell!!
2. An understanding of the terminology and some of the theory of options trading (I am a complete novice)
3. If it sounds too easy, it probably is (a phrase I find I'm repeating very often to friends who are keeping up with my learning curve)
4. To do a search on ASF before I shell out for anything trading related.
My summation of the CD's: if you know absolutely nothing about options, it's a real convenient way to learn something. 2 weeks worth of commutes without dodgy DJ's telling me about the traffic & weather that I can't avoid anyway.
I reckon I will have a crack at options sooner or later, but it will be after a couple of $30-$50 books and lot of searches on this forum, not $4000 minimum spend with Optionetics
If I can add a little bit too it; imagine taking a weekend course in French and then going to Paris to close a business deal with some snaky Parisian merchant.
Thank-you wayneL - that idea sounds ideal for the Advanced Course #1, conducted the following weekend. Another $4,000 (plus airfares, accommodation and meals of course).
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