
July 1st, 2010

Genius
Greetings fellow option trader!
Do you have any questions I can answer for you?
I was wondering if you had any questions about options, option trading, or other related topics that you have not been able to find answers to either on my site or anywhere else. If you do, great! I am ready to answer (if I can). But please read this entire post to find out how to submit your question.
I had an idea to make myself available to answer any and all questions as well as I could. No question is out of bounds and I will try to answer all questions submitted whether you are a member of the OptionGenius site or not. There is no charge for this.
But I do ask the following:
Please give me enough time to answer.
Please do not ask me anything that would require a specific answer. I am not a licensed investment advisor and cannot [...]
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education, Philosophy of Option Selling | 5 Comments »

May 31st, 2010

Genius
We are happy to be introducing several enhancements to the OptionGenius.com service this month. As the days go on, we will announce 3 major improvements that should make membership much more valuable.
The first of these enhancements is Autotrading.
We are pleased to announce that starting today, we will be autotrading with Eoption.com ( a registered broker/dealer). Update: we are autotrading with Optionsxpress.com as well.
Autotrading is a great concept where members have the ability to have their broker execute the OptionGenius.com trades for them in their account.
Best of all, there is no extra charge for this service.
What this means for members:
Once we send out an email trade alert, your broker will automatically enter that order for you in your account. Chances are your order will be filled faster than you could do it yourself. Eoption.com has an autotrade desk where they have people who just sit and wait for these alerts all [...]
Tags: Autotrade
Posted in Option Selling, Orders and Execution | 47 Comments »

May 17th, 2010

Genius
Got a great email from a member about how he made some quick profits from the recent volatility…
“Allen,
I had a wonderful two days with this volatility, by changing your procedure slightly.
The changes I implemented are:
1. When it looks like we are in a bearish market, do only the bearish call spread and NOT the bullish put spread. Do the converse when in a bullish market.
2. In a volailte market that whipsaws, do not close out both the high and low strikes simultaneously. Rather close out the short position first, since that is the one costing us the maintenance requirement. The long position has no impact on the maintenace margin requirement.
This is what happened:
On Thursday May 06, being my birthday, I wanted to try my luck at Day Trading with options, since the market looked quite volatile!
Did a RUT May 720/730 bearish call spread. Bought the 730 call at 2.39 and [...]
Tags: Testimonial, Volatility
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education, Trades and Adjustments | 2 Comments »

January 16th, 2010

Genius
Got the following question this week:
First, thank you for providing a great service. I have been trading options for about a year and have learned a lot from your tips and alerts.
Now, I have a question about position sizing. I am trading $100k of my funds using your alerts. When you send out an alert I multiply the number of contracts by 10 when putting on the trade. My question is: instead of just multiplying the contracts, can I use a combination of increasing the contracts and/or increasing the width of the strikes?
For example, if the alert was to sell 2 SPX 1200/1210 Calls, instead of selling 20 10 point spreads, could I sell 10 20 point spreads? What would be the pros/cons of doing something like this?
It seems to me, if I widen the strikes, then when I need to make an adjustment, I could sell the near strike [...]
Tags: Credit Spread, Iron Condor, SPX, Strikes
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education, Trades and Adjustments | 12 Comments »

January 12th, 2010

Genius
What is option time decay and how does it work in the context of stock options? Option time decay is denoted by using the Greek word theta. Theta continues to be one of six indicators in option trading known as the Greeks.
Options are a decaying asset. Option time decay is a feature of all options that basically means that an option will lose value as time goes on and it gets closer to expiration. So when you are looking to buy an option, the more time until expiration means the more the option will cost versus an option that has less time to expiration in which the underlying can move.
Theta specifically measures the sensitivity of an option’s value according to the passing of time. Another way of saying this is that theta is the ratio of change in an option price according to the fleetingness of time before the expiration. [...]
Tags: Option Greeks, Theta, Time Decay
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education, Philosophy of Option Selling | 8 Comments »

January 7th, 2010

Genius
What are Some Good Books on Option Selling?
What should you do if you are interesting in learning more about option selling?
The best way to get started is to read a few good books on the subject.
When I first got started I went to an expensive seminar. After two days I knew enough about options to be dangerous – to my myself. After trying to trade options based on what I had learned at the seminar I realized, after losing a lot of money, that there was more to it.
So I started researching books on options, videos online, websites, etc. Here are some of the best books I found on options and trading in general.
Options Books
One of the most advertised books is The Complete Guide to Options Selling: How Selling Options Can Lead to Stellar Returns in Bull and Bear Markets by James Cordier and Michael Gross. It goes into detail [...]
Tags: Option Books, Options Education
Posted in Option Selling, Option Strategies, Options Education, Philosophy of Option Selling | 8 Comments »

November 6th, 2009

Genius
Are you wondering which is better: option trades that result in a credit or trades that result in a debit? Simply put, you’re asking whether you should choose a credit spread or debit spread strategy. Let’s consider both options in more detail.
A credit spread (also called a net credit spread) involves the investor selling one option then buying another option. The second option is in the same class and also shares the same expiry date. However, there are different strike prices between the two options. In this instance, the new investor gets a net credit for entering this position. He is looking forward to the spreads either narrowing or expiring in order to get a profit. A credit spread is basically a conservative strategy in investment. It is designed to earn a moderate level of income while also limiting your potential loss. In this circumstance, you are buying and selling [...]
Tags: Credit Spread, Debit Spread
Posted in Option Selling, Option Strategies, Philosophy of Option Selling | 8 Comments »

October 27th, 2009

Genius
Many of my members belong to other option trading advisories. Some of these are similar to mine. And normally you have to become a member to determine if their claims and trades are reality.
So this post is to just say beware of option trading advisories. Even mine. never put money into a trade without papertrading the strategies first. Take everything said at face value and make them (and me) prove to you that they are telling the truth and that their trades do make money.
Here is an email from a member who tried another service. The name of the service is blocked out.
By the way, I had to open a XXXXX account just to see what those guys were up to. Their 100% auto-trade loss last October was pretty scary (the only thing that saved them was that they came up with 100% gain in one day on what I guess [...]
Tags: Option Trading Advisories
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education | No Comments »

October 21st, 2009

Genius
Options Trading is growing like gangbusters.
Good news for us is that the first step for someone new to options will be will learning to buy and sell options, not sell. And so option sellers like us, will have more volume and liquidity to work with.
Here is a video of the crazy man Jim Cramer interviewing the CEO of OptionsXpress after they released their 2009 3rd quarter earnings.
Tags: Jim Cramer, Options Trading, OptionsXpress
Posted in Option Selling, Options Education | No Comments »

October 20th, 2009

Genius
Here is a question that comes after reading Lesson 2 in my 9 Lesson course on selling options.
When you say, to buy back the option before, the expiration date, don’t you incur additional costs, that reduce your profits even further ?
Good question. In some trades like the Calendar spread you have to buy them back because you don’t want to get long the option. But in an iron condor or credit spread, you can wait and let the options expire. If you buy them back you incur commissions plus whatever you are buying it back for.
In many cases it is a question of risk vs cost. if there is a lot of time left before expiration, you are probably best buying the trade back in case there is a move against you and you end up losing money. On the other hand if you let it expire you can save a few dollars and maybe 1 or 2% points on the trade.
So lets say you it will cost you $20 to buy back a trade, but if the trade moves against you, you could lose $1,000. Do you take your profits or hope for that last $20. Even if the trade moves just once against you in 4 years, you still lose money.
Make sense?
Here is a real life example.
On October 12, 2009 I did a credit spread on AAPL. I Sold the Nov 165 Puts and Bought the Nov 160 Puts as protection for a credit of .50 on each spread. There were about 40 days to expiration.
On this trade if the puts expired worthless I would make 11.11% before commissions. (Credit of $50 divided by max loss of $450 per spread = potential return of 11.11%)
Well AAPL just had earnings yesterday and the stock shot up to about 200 today. This morning, I was able to buy back the credit spreads at .07 each.
So I made .43 per credit spread in 8 days. That is 9.5%
Why did I buy the spreads back? I could have let them expire worthless. If I did i would make another .07 per spread. But there is still 31 days left to expiration. So I decided to make my profit and money and look for another trade.
Who knows? Maybe AAPL will settle down and I will sell another credit spread on it this month for more credit. Or maybe I will do something else. All I know is that I don’t want to risk losing $450 per spread (anything can happen and APPL could drop in price) to make another $7 per spread.
Yes I did pay the commissions by buying the spreads back. But on each spread I paid $2.50 in commissions. $2.50 going in and $2.50 coming out which is a total of $5 in commission per spread. So instead of mkaing $43 per spread I made $38 per spread which is still 8.44%.
(That’s why having an option friendly broker is so important. I pay $1.25 per option with no trip charge. If you are paying $10 plus $1 per option or some other crazy commissions then you ae playing a game that is stacked against you. Get a better broker.)
In my opinion, take off your spreads when they are close to worthless if there is alot of time left. Take your profits. Everyday your money is out of the market is a day you cannot lose it.
This is not to say I never let my spreads go to expiration. Sometimes I do, but not too often on a highly volatile stock.
Tags: AAPL, Commissions, Credit Spread, Iron Condor, option brokers
Posted in option brokers, Option Selling, Options Education | 11 Comments »