Showing posts with label option strategies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label option strategies. Show all posts

Option Spread Trading: A Comprehensive Guide to Strategies and Tactics (Wiley Trading) Review

Option Spread Trading: A Comprehensive Guide to Strategies and Tactics (Wiley Trading)
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The author definitely knows what he is writing about but I have strong doubts about his ability to write a readable and error-free book. Throughout reading it, I had a strong impression that I was the first person on the planet who read it, and this includes the author himself and editors and proofreaders if there were any. (It is incomprehensible to me how such a reputable publishing house as Wiley could give it a green light.) But it is not only English, which sometimes gives you a real headache. It is also factual errors. For example, there is reference to Figure 4.4 but it is not there. There is also no Figure 4.3 but luckily, there is no reference to it, either. The author writes "straddle" where it should be "strangle" and "iron condor" where it should be "iron butterfly." Figure 5.17 has Long Straddle with wrong numbers, and this is a Figure comparing the Long Straddle with the Reverse Iron Butterfly. There are more errors, misreferences, and clumsy sentences violating the rules of English grammar. The author also has a very strange tendency to explain relatively simple concepts in the most convoluted manner and constantly repeat himself.
The aforementioned Figure 5.17 was a last straw that broke my patience and rushed me to write this review. I am almost sure that I will see more surprises in the rest of the book, and I intend to read it to the end because of the autor's competence in the subject (that's why 2 stars rather than 1). So if you are eager to test your patience and to see how quickly you'll get really annoyed with this book, buy this book with confidence.

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No-Hype Options Trading: Myths, Realities, and Strategies That Really Work (Wiley Trading) Review

No-Hype Options Trading: Myths, Realities, and Strategies That Really Work (Wiley Trading)
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"No-Hype Options Trading" is a great guide on how to go about consistent delta neutral trading without being overly optimistic about large windfalls. The author is quite frank about this style of trading being conservative but not easy. He spends his chapters on detailed strategies for placement of trades and more importantly how to adjust the trades or exit. He pays particular attention to iron condor trading. The book provides a range of exit strategies based on risk/reward, experience trading, and the Greeks. You can feel his concern for the trader's financial well being. He explains how to determine and set up the signals for exit and adjustment. He insists that a successful trader needs these potential exit/adjustments in place right after the original investment trade is put in place. It is not safe to make these trades without a strategy and adjustments that are in play on the day of the trade. Constant vigilance to the trade is necessary for success.
The chapter on calendars pushes the concept that while the underlying price effects the trade, even more basic and extremely influential is a drop in the positions volatility. He dwells on the significance of the volatility difference in the legs of the trade also. These points alone may change the way you trade calendars and increase your success and profit.
If you are looking for some precise guidelines on how to make delta neutral option trades in the condor, butterfly, and calendar world and detailed methods for exits or adjustments, you will be taking notes out of this text. I feel that I will make back the price of this book in my trading this month, many time over.


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Profiting with Iron Condor Options: Strategies from the Frontline for Trading in Up or Down Markets Review

Profiting with Iron Condor Options: Strategies from the Frontline for Trading in Up or Down Markets
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The iron condor is basically an option trade that involves selling and buying two out-of-the money calls and two out-of-the money puts in the same month for one stock or index. Actually, you are really putting on two vertical spreads, one on each side of the current price of the stock or index.
The author favors trading the SPX, RUT, and NDX mainly for reasons of liquidity and the fact that as European-style options you do not have to worry about exercise prior to expiration date. Interestingly, the back cover stresses the ability to earn consistent returns very month with "surprisingly modest risk," but the author himself states early in the book that this should not be considered to be an income strategy and then he goes on to stress that there are a lot of risks with this strategy. In fact as he explains, those risks make it imperative that the trader keep a watchful eye on both "wings" of the condor so that adjustments can be made as needed. This is definitely not one of those trades that you can put on and then just check every week or so.
Although many traders who use spreads typically like to leave their trades on for as long as possible in the hopes of keeping most, if not all of the amounts that they were credited when the trade was opening, this author actually recommends against holding trades open for this long. He definitely is more in favor of going for singles rather than home runs. For example, he claims that "the exit strategy that works best is to give back almost all of the credit. If you take in an initial 16% credit and keep only 3%, 4% or 5%, you're giving back most of the potential profits. How many trades have you made that can consistently make profits of 3% in a few days regardless of the direction of the market?" I see his point, but if you are someone who has only previously traded options from the long side, be prepared to change your way of thinking.
Those who have been involved in other types of spreads may already be familiar with much of the material found in the book, but those who have not been involved in selling options or in spread trading of any type will find this book interesting. If you read the book and decide that you're really not that interested in this particular strategy or type of trading, you won't have to waste much of your time since the book can be finished in one sitting.

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Option Spread Strategies: Trading Up, Down, and Sideways Markets (Bloomberg Financial) Review

Option Spread Strategies: Trading Up, Down, and Sideways Markets (Bloomberg Financial)
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It's a good idea before buying a book, especially a book on options trading, whether you're in the audience for which the book was written. If you're a beginner, don't start here. I would recommend another book by the same author, "The Options Workbook." If you can make it through that book, you'll be more than prepared to take on this one.
Learning options or anything else involves two very different types of skills: (1) knowing how to do what you're trying to learn; (2) knowing how to learn it. You can learn (1) by studying the subject itself, but not (2). And unfortunately, there are very few options-trading books on the market that will teach you. The reason is that most of their authors, while they may be great traders, don't know how to teach. In fact, when it comes to giving satisfactory explanations, many are scatter-brained. The great strength of Saliba's books is that he does know how to teach. The books are in workbook format. He gives you examples of the strategies he's discussing, gives a fairly detailed analysis of each, and then offers practice questions (with answers) after each strategy, as well as at the end of each chapter. There's also a bonus final exam at the end of the book. This is sound teaching technique; these books are almost ideal for self-study. If you're anything like me, you learn by doing, not by staring at a page in a book. Both of Saliba's books are very hands-on.
Why do I say that Saliba's books are "almost ideal" for self-study? Because Saliba doesn't always spell out each of the steps that a beginner would have to know in order to justify the conclusions he draws. One thing a beginner has to know is how to construct a profit/loss table for any strategy he or she is studying, however simple or complex. And from that table, he or she must be able to construct the graph. Once this is done, he or she will know what the profit/loss picture looks like at expiration. The student will then know, for each price of the underlying at expiration, the intrinsic value of the component (long call, short call, long put, short put, long stock, short stock), and the profit/loss value for each. Once this is known, the combined profit-loss figure can easily be calculated. By looking at the table, one will know where the breakeven points are, as well as the maximum gain and maximum loss one can expect when putting on that strategy. "The Options Workbook" gives both profit-loss tables and graphs. But it doesn't make explicit how the values in the table are calculated. (Saliba probably assumes that the reader already knows this. But a beginner doesn't know this, unless he or she is told.) To close this pedagogical gap, I would recommend the beginner read James Bittman's book, "Options for the Stock Investor," especially chapters 1 and 2. While this process of constructing tables and graphs may at times be tedious, and even seemingly redundant, DON'T TRY TO SIDESTEP IT. Unless you understand the configuration of any option strategy at expiration, you really don't know what you're doing. And when you go online and click on the button to put on your position, you still won't know what you're doing. I'm convinced that a great many people who lose their shirts in the market, do so not because they were wrong in their prediction of the direction of movement in the underlying, but because their assessment of their positions were either wrong or incomplete.
"Option Spread Strategies" does a fine job of integrating the option Greeks, and volatility, into the analysis I've just described. However, this means that you have a working understanding of the Greeks before you begin. Saliba's discussion of the Greeks in "The Options Workbook" is woefully inadequate. In "Option Spread Strategies," as I said, he skillfully weaves the Greeks into the fabric of the strategies he discusses. But again, he's making great demands on the reader's understanding of the Greeks. To get a working knowledge of the Greeks, I would recommend two books: (1) "Trading Option Greeks," by Dan Passarelli; (2) "Trading Options as a Professional," by James Bittman. (All the books I've mentioned are available at Amazon.) In Bittman's book, focus on chapter 4. In that chapter, pages 118 to 134 are crucial, because Bittman hammers away at the essential distinction between option delta and position delta, option gamma and position gamma, and so on, for each of the Greeks. Unhappily for the beginner, the discussion is extremely terse. But it contains everything you have to understand to work with the Greeks. After I had torn out what little hair I have left, I finally got it. So will you. And when you've got it, you will be more than well-prepared to delve into Saliba's book "Option Spread Strategies." But please keep in mind, there are no shortcuts to learning options. If you don't expend the time and effort to learn before you expose yourself to the market, you'll most certainly learn from the market itself, the school of hard knocks. And I would say that paying the price for these books is a whole lot less traumatic. If you can't explain EXACTLY what you're doing when you put on an options position, what you hope to gain, and what you stand to lose, you don't understand it. Unfortunately, there's someone else taking the other side of your trade, whose face you'll never see and name you'll never know. He too may not understand what he's doing. But is that a risk you can afford to take?

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Options as a Strategic Investment Review

Options as a Strategic Investment
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Most people who trade either stocks, options, or futures lose money. This is because they 1) are undercapitalized, 2) have no system or 3) don't understand the instrument they trade. 4) some combination of 1, 2, and 3. This book won't help you if you don't go into the market with enough money, but it will help you develop your own system (after a lot more research) and figure out how to use options to increase returns or limit risk.
This book describes just about every fundamental strategy you could try with options. It covers the total return concept of covered call writing, the pros and cons of option buying, examines various types of spreads (vertical, calendar, and diagonal) and the various delta (price) neutral strategies.
There is some advanced math here (in an appendix), but anyone of average intelligence and stock market knowledge could follow it.
Don't pay attention to those reviewers who trash the book--they have no clue. I constantly refer to this book in order to gain a better understanding of different option strategies. No matter which direction option markets evolve, the information of this book will still apply.

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"Options as a Strategic Investment" provides a solid foundation in the basic properties and advantages of options, listed and non-equity, and goes on to detail scores of proven techniques and tactics for a wide array of market scenarios.It reflects today's market realities and the new innovative options products available. With in-depth analysis, buy and sell strategies, detailed guidance for investing and coverage of the lasest developments in futures and futures options, this is a comprehensive guide.

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