- Joined
- 1 February 2007
- Posts
- 96
- Reactions
- 3
* Option traders don't buy naked options, it is a losing strategy. They have an arsenal of strategies.
* Commissions. In my world it is cheaper to trade options than shares. Don't trade based on commission. Find a strategy that works for you, and then worry about finding a broker that offers you the right price.
Having said that, I'd say better to trade options (with the right domain skills).
Other points I agree but not these 2.
Lots of traders make money going long naked options. If you deem it as a 100% losing strategy then the reverse (selling naked options) would be a 100% winning strategy. Not the case, I'm sure many accounts were blown last week, while fortunes were made by naked options buyers.
As the OP is talking about ASX, shares are cheaper than options. Commissions AND dealing spread. ASX options liquidity are generally horrible.
* I hold my opinion that if all you are doing is buying naked options, it is a losing strategy. And I'm sure if grease implemented his long strategy in buying a call option to replicate his long stock strategy, he would have lost all his money.
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* I hold my opinion that if all you are doing is buying naked options, it is a losing strategy.
Can you please outline your reasoning?
I think you've made a pretty good case for investing, not trading, in stocks over a longer term. Also you've made a case for having multiple option strategies, such as naked puts and calls last week, and selling credit spreads when the US market was flat prior to that over the last few months.
Why would you want to trade last week's extreme market movements with stocks when options were getting double or triple the premium?
A quick glance at a VIX chart for the past year should furnish you with an answer to your question.
Thanks for your response brisman, I'd been contemplating the possibility of formulating a trading strategy using VIX derivatives for much of the past year. Your mention of the possibility of using options over an ETF has given me some fresh ideas.
Do you mind if I ask which broker you're using?
It’s hard to get a 563% return on amount at risk from shares in three weeks.
3/8/2015 Buy to Open 1 UVXY Dec 15 10 Call $0.80 $14.95 $0.02 ($94.97)
24/8/2015 Sell to Close 1 UVXY Dec 15 10 Call $5.50 $14.95 $0.02 $535.02
Soooo you're trading options on leveraged futures on options?
That is bound to end well
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