Archive for the ‘Trading put options’ Category

An Options Trading System to Cut Losses

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

One of the main principles of any successful options trading system is to hold onto your gains and cut your losses.  Some traders even consider this to be the most important principle of trading.  Unfortunately, the heavy losses suffered by options traders year in and year out indicate that many people are not adhering to this principle.

Fortunately, there is an options trading system you can use to cut your losses and walk away a winner—even if things aren’t going according to plan.  In fact, this particular trading strategy is designed to protect your core investments against adverse market movements.

Known as protective equity puts, this options trading system works with your existing stock portfolio.  It functions as a way to arrest a downward slide in share price—at least for your personal portfolio.  It is an effective strategy to use if you are worried about market uncertainty or future falls and would like to get a bit of insurance to protect yourself against a heavy financial loss.

To use this options trading system, you need to identify the stocks in your portfolio that you are bullish about in general, but worried about overall.  Although protective equity puts have traditionally been used only on individual stocks, they can also be used for ETFs and some index funds.  In this way, you can get insurance on most of your existing portfolio.

Once you have your list together, you will want to determine what percentage of each position you would like to protect with puts.  Most traders opt to insure the entire position, although depending on your reasoning and motivation for being in the stock in the first place you may opt for a partial put option.  Either way, remember that protective equity puts are sold in units of 100 shares, so you will want to even out your investments accordingly.

The next stage is to bookmark your current share prices.  This will serve as a reference point on your protective equity puts.  You will want to buy your protective equity puts for a share price that is just below the current share price of the stock.  These puts give you the right to sell your holdings at the price you’ve lock in at a future date.

Depending on your confidence in the market, the size of the investment, and the market trends you are working with, you may choose short term or long-term contracts for the puts.  If you want to lock in profits as you go, you can choose shorter dates for the puts and renew them at slightly higher share prices as the underlying stock rises.

If the stock goes down, with the protective equity puts in place you will be able to close out the position with a relative small loss.  If you determine that even at the lower price you’d like to keep your holding, you are under no obligation to sell it and can simply let the protective equity puts expire.  Its an options trading system that many stockholders over look, but it can protect you against financial ruin.

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Explain Option Trading – The Call Option & Put Option.

Friday, October 30th, 2009

As you may know by now, there are two types of stock options - call options and put options.

You buy a call option if you expect the future price of a stock to rise (also known as a long position), as opposed to a purchasing a put option, which is what you’d purchase if you expect the future price of a stock to go down (also known as a short position).

You can use a simple example to help you remember the difference: When you call some one on the phone the receiver goes UP. When you put down the phone, the receiver goes DOWN.

Getting back to call options specifically, remember that they’re concerned with the right (not the obligation) to purchase a stock at a future time, at a pre-determined price. A previous example provided could be the purchase of shares of Apple Corporation at a predetermined price, for a 3-year period.

The put option is a little trickier to grasp for most people. That’s because, unlike with stock trading, options trading strategies allow  you to make money when stocks go up and down.

Exactly the opposite to a call option, a put option gives the right – not obligation – to sell stock at a future date.

The put buyer, either believes that the underlying asset’s price will fall by the exercise date, or hopes to protect a long position in it. (a technique known as “hedging”). The advantage of buying a put over short selling the asset is that the option owner’s risk of loss is limited to the premium paid for it, whereas the asset short sellers risk of loss is unlimited. The put buyer’s (risk) of gain is limited to option’s strike price, less the underlying’s spot price, and the premium/fee paid for it.

explain option trading1 Explain Option Trading   The Call Option & Put Option.

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