Rolling an Options Trade Explained | Options Trading Concepts

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 121

  • @johnjohn-kd7fl
    @johnjohn-kd7fl 4 года назад +64

    This is one of those videos where you realize you know way less than you thought you did. At least I know what I'm doing this weekend. Thanks for the info.

  • @MusicGodsNFT
    @MusicGodsNFT 4 года назад +10

    Hello there and thanks for the video. If you are open for critique I have a suggestion. When teaching/ explaining a concept regarding options please consider the audience and the possible/ probable lack of understanding of short selling and especially naked puts. It is exponentially easier to grasp the concept of buying covered calls to people who would look for this type of information. In other words, if someone has the approval for selling naked puts (which is level 5 clearance) the concept of rolling should be basic information. This is my opinion but perhaps others will vary. Wishing you well. 👍🏼

  • @raulesteves5264
    @raulesteves5264 4 года назад +5

    I read a comment about the assumptions and benefits of rolling: rolling an option into the future allows for decreased max loss and increases the probability of profit (because time allows for a reversion to the profit side). The problem with rolling is that there has to be an assumption of a reversion to the OTM credit spreads. And when the price becomes too trending, then rolling becomes obsolete, and if that happens, your max loss increases. When do you know when to stop rolling?

  • @thetacc7403
    @thetacc7403 2 года назад +2

    We wonder how the Days till expiration affect the rollover price theoretically. Like which one of the scenarios below would be cheaper:
    To roll over a position with 40 DTE to 50 DTE (adding 10 days till expiration)
    or
    To roll over a position with only 1 DTE to 11 DTE (again adding 10 DTE)

  • @scottallison1434
    @scottallison1434 5 лет назад +6

    I sell naked puts and when I have to roll the position I choose a lower strike price than my original trade. In your example you choose the same strike price when you roll into the future. Doesn’t it make more sense to lower the strike price as long as you’re still getting a net credit? Thanks Scott

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +3

      That's certainly another way to do it - that gives you more space to the downside, you just give up additional credit but also give up directional risk. I like your method as well, but for simplicity's sake went with the same strike for the example.

    • @dontswin
      @dontswin 2 года назад +1

      That's what I always do. I choose a lower strike when rolling, it seems as tho there is less of a chance the stock price will keep on collapsing thru and past your new strike you sold (chose) the 2nd time. Maybe it's just me but choosing a strike closer to where the current price is seems way more risky and gives your position no leeway.

  • @MrJking1962
    @MrJking1962 5 лет назад +1

    I have been doing risk and profit analysis on pure options trading in my IRA for the last month. The low risk trades also have low profit. It equates to hundreds of trades and a 6% percent annual return on investment. I could save myself time by putting it in a stable fund. The higher risk trades seem more like gambling. One bad trade will erase 10 previous trades. I am an experienced long term trend trader who wants to minimize loss and capture more profit as a trend oscillates to its end. That is where options seem to fit for me.
    I guess in a margin account it could be 12% annual because I was using cash secured put selling on put condors. 12% is good. For an IRA I will stick to putting puts to get into a trend and selling covered calls to capture more. Its also easier to decide where I want to place my strike prices in line with the trend.
    Scratch this for now. My analysis did not consider leveraging my odds using theta. I was only looking at expiration.

    • @tonyh1718
      @tonyh1718 3 года назад

      How low is your low risk trades?
      I do weekly wheel trades and ive grinded 10% in under 6 months and my roi is awful

  • @stiffsheet817
    @stiffsheet817 2 года назад +1

    So does it mean when you decide to get assigned you’d have higher cost average or is it still $4330?

  • @stocktawk
    @stocktawk 3 года назад +2

    Do you have a video about rolling contracts that you have purchased? Instead of sold..

  • @alondob
    @alondob 2 года назад +1

    Great explanation with excellent visuals!

  • @ManjitSandhu
    @ManjitSandhu 2 года назад +1

    Great video. Thanks.. Was wondering if you have a video on how to sell covered calls on a long term portfolio of stocks where i do not want to have then called away (capital gain tax) but want to make a little extra money by selling covered calls. Yes, I could go low delta (like say 10) but even that means that some of the stocks would get called away.

  • @MakingYouCASH
    @MakingYouCASH 5 лет назад +1

    When I roll, what happens to buying power????? Don't I need more buying power when I roll then I needed for the initial trade? Also, I'm referring to a losing options trade. Please help.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад

      Not necessarily - some may require a bit more, some a bit less, but if we're just moving our risk from one month to the next, the buying power typically remains roughly the same.

  • @Pathos312
    @Pathos312 4 года назад +2

    My question is, when would you want to roll an option? This assumes the option was correct and you're banking on it moving further into that direction, correct?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад +4

      Either or - your example is an offensive roll where you're trying to get more money for a continued move.
      This example in the video is a defensive roll where the stock price goes against you, where you may want to extend duration by rolling the short put out in time for a credit.

    • @Pathos312
      @Pathos312 4 года назад +1

      @@tastyliveshow Gotcha, thank you for responding.

    • @jaydenjohnson7486
      @jaydenjohnson7486 3 года назад

      thank you j martin i had the same question. i had a call that is moving in my favorite & want to change the exp so i can bank more. wasnt sure when it closed if i would see some profit if the strike is up or if i was just doubling down my profits at the time of my roll.

  • @Andrewbliss44
    @Andrewbliss44 6 лет назад +2

    Question: What is the best ( right time) time period before Expiration to Roll -over short Put? And which new Expiration ( maximum time period) should be chosen?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  6 лет назад +4

      We usually wait until a certain unwanted delta is realized, or if extrinsic value in our current option gets low, or if expiration draws near - we usually go to the next monthly cycle that is closest to 45 DTE, but it's really up to you!

    • @garhoo1733
      @garhoo1733 5 лет назад +6

      Tasty trade studies have shown 21 DTE Days Until Expiration is the optimal time to roll

  • @cashbull59
    @cashbull59 Год назад

    essentially the government does that to our money, always pushing the retirement benefits further into the future, thanks for the video!

  • @stephensawyer2511
    @stephensawyer2511 2 года назад

    I'm currently down 60% on a call option with 5 total contracts and a
    total cost of $378. If I roll them over at the same strike price at a
    later date then I will receive a $500 credit. How does that work?

  • @rogjerr
    @rogjerr 4 года назад +1

    When rolling, what effect does altering the duration have on the trade? e.g Rolling every week, then switch to rolling a month? Is this good/bad? Any optimal way to do rolls? Also, at what point should we stop the trade and accept a loss, I mean when should we give up (if needed) as we can't roll forever?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад +5

      If I can't roll forever because the product is too big or I don't want to, I typically close at 2x credit received as a stop loss. If I collect $1.00, that means closing at a $2.00 net loss. If I'm rolling, I'm rolling month to month since liquidity is typically highest in the monthly cycles. We usually roll around 21DTE to get back to the 45 DTE cycle in the next month. If I'm trading defined risk, I can't roll a credit spread for a credit if it's ITM, so if it's about to go ITM I roll at that point regardless of DTE for the most part.
      Totally up to you though! Just search for certain topics or keywords on www.tastytrade.com/tt/search
      You'll find plenty of content on everything.

  • @thehairgeneer5842
    @thehairgeneer5842 4 года назад

    I have been looking at selling naked puts at a strike at or below 20% of the current stock price on Strong underlines ($50+) looking to receive premiums at about 3-8% roe (from maintenance) 30day expiration. One thing that confuses me is what protections are in place if a underline gaps down after hours past my strike price? Say the stock is trading at $60.00 and my strike is $48.00 and I have a stop loss at $50.00, if the underline gaps down from $60 to say $47.00 after hours my stop loss will not be executed in time, nor would I be able to roll my position fast enough correct? I dont mind taking a loss on trades at say 2x what I received on premium, but with wild market swings this is a major risk with naked puts....would you agree? Thanks in advance...

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад

      That's correct - there is no protection in place since the market would be closed - one thing I'd consider is buying an option or a few options for a few pennies far OTM - even if they don't go ITM, they'll still explode on a massive selloff like that and it would protect against the expansion in extrinsic value / intrinsic value in the short option. Either way, if you want to be fully protected on a short put you may be better off with a spread. Even if you want to take the shares, you can still sell out of the long put and retain that hedge if you wanted to convert back to an ITM short put to get the shares. Totally up to you but I hope this helps!

  • @theotherguy6155
    @theotherguy6155 3 года назад

    So If you follow the tasty trade mechanics would you still buy back a put at 50% profit? or how would handle a rolled put? because if you buy back at 50% you're still locking in a loss.
    How do you handle this situation?

  • @antt9818
    @antt9818 3 года назад +3

    Can you roll the option on the day of expiry?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  3 года назад +1

      Yep - you can roll at any time the market is open.

  • @YTsuuuucks
    @YTsuuuucks 8 лет назад +1

    Interesting concept. Would you ever continuously roll a naked put out month by month, rather than actually buying the underlying equity? Max gain would be capped, but using the time value in your favor could be a good trade off.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  8 лет назад +4

      +dillcifer Good question! If a trader is comfortable with holding the ITM put, they could certainly roll the same strike into the future continuously until A) the stock price rose or B) they collected enough extrinsic value to reduce their breakeven to where the stock was trading at to get out for a scratch. A lot of traders hold positions until they're right, but others take the loser off and deploy a different trade elsewhere. I would say it has more to do with the style of trader at the end of the day!

  • @christendenise220
    @christendenise220 2 года назад

    For some reason this is my one question I can't seem to get a straight answer to. I sold a put for $25 premium, the next day the option was profitable by $14 so I bought to close the position. Did I keep the $25 and the $14? Or did I forgo the $25 to only make $14? Or did I only make the difference between the two contracts? So confusing, thanks....

    • @dontswin
      @dontswin 2 года назад

      I think you only gained the $14 because you only gained slightly over 50% of the entire $25 "potential" profit{you closed the position, so that was the end of it). Had you waited until it was going to expire you would gain a higher % so long as the stock price IS STILL ABOVE the strike price. Remember, selling puts is a credit to your account in the beginning but you don't really get the entire amount until the expiration day or only a % of the credit(over the duration of you holding that sold put) if you decide to close it( prior to the expiration day). At least that's how I try to think of it.

  • @colinteoh3230
    @colinteoh3230 7 лет назад +4

    Hello Tastytrade, For this particular case, how do you mitigate early assignment risk when rolling ITM puts.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  7 лет назад +6

      Colin,
      Just rolling in general will help mitigate risk - essentially, the more extrinsic value there is in an option, the less likely it is to get assigned. Therefore if we roll an option into the future, it adds more extrinsic value, and lowers the risk of assignment.
      Even if we get assigned, the risk profile doesn't change - just the buying power reduction does.

  • @edmandell3064
    @edmandell3064 3 года назад

    Great Video. Couldn't you roll up or down ? Also, does it make sense from time to time to roll the direction? for example: closing a put then rolling out a call.

  • @saderick52
    @saderick52 3 года назад +2

    do you have a video teaching rolling for spreads?

  • @drjems
    @drjems 3 года назад

    Thank you Mike...its awesome

  • @defcon2544
    @defcon2544 2 года назад

    Can rolling a covered call trigger a wash sale? Specifically, can you roll over a weekly covered call to the next week and not trigger a wash sale? Or do you have to roll forward at least a month?

  • @ricknogan413
    @ricknogan413 3 года назад +1

    I have a question for you - What is the advantage of rolling versus letting your contract expire and writing a new one? Is there lower fees by rolling versus doing a new contract? Is it ease of use and it takes less time?
    Example. In June, AAPL is trading at $100, you own a $150 call expiring in June. If you “keep the dream alive” by rolling into a $150 Oct call, would there be any difference vs letting your June contract expire and purchasing the $150 Oct call as a new contract?

    • @bluesky5587
      @bluesky5587 2 года назад

      I was wondering this also…rolling is a wrapped buy to close sell to open …but it seems u sell at bid instead of the ask ..same with position I…. Why not close it yourself and then sell to open new position….. I could use limit orders and get better pricing.

    • @yaakovibnrussell6475
      @yaakovibnrussell6475 2 года назад

      After 9 months, you may already have realized but the point is you usually don't want (or can't afford) assignment. realize that not all brokers make you cash secure your puts...

    • @yaakovibnrussell6475
      @yaakovibnrussell6475 2 года назад

      I also note you are talking about lottery ticket buying (your example long call at $150). You can't roll out a long position without coughing up more dough. The video discusses selling the options and doing the roll because (at least in the short term) the trade went the wrong direction on you and you are in the crosshairs to be assigned if you let it expire.

    • @yaakovibnrussell6475
      @yaakovibnrussell6475 2 года назад

      If you are buying options, yes, you would always wait for them to expire because It could bank at the last minute.

    • @glencaple3888
      @glencaple3888 2 года назад

      @@yaakovibnrussell6475 If you buy an otm put option, and it expires itm, the brokerage will assign you the # of shares that you contracted for. So you will now be short the underlying asset. I don't know how a buyer of an option can be assigned anything because the definition of buying an option states that the buyer has the RIGHT, not the obligation. So when you are assigned the asset(s), you now have an obligation. But it's the brokerage's choice. Not yours. ???

  • @vr1125
    @vr1125 5 лет назад +1

    Hi. Question: Won’t it be more advantageous to just let it expire in the money, buy 100 shares at 45 and then sell a cover call at the 50 strike? You may collect more in premium this way. Thanks

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +4

      You certainly could! That is a popular strategy, it just takes a lot of capital to execute, since 100 shares requires much more capital than a short put.

    • @SuicidelG
      @SuicidelG 2 года назад

      @@tastyliveshow I'm pretty sure most brokers won't let you sell naked puts and you have to be cash covered anyways...

    • @yaakovibnrussell6475
      @yaakovibnrussell6475 2 года назад

      @@SuicidelG o yes plenty real brokers do. Also, even with CSP's you could end up buying on margin and a downturn in your portfolio could get you in a margin call.

  • @MrAUro-hm7ew
    @MrAUro-hm7ew 4 года назад

    If im already on the last trade for PDT, does Rolling will be accounted as one trade? i need to roll my position but im already at 3 Day trade counter. thanks in advance :)

  • @tubingit10
    @tubingit10 5 лет назад +2

    Hello, thanks for this helpful video! I’m new to options so I hope this isn’t too dumb: so if I sold the 45 put and closed the position and opened up a new position for the next month, the broker uses the same original contract you had on? I guess what I’m trying to ask is that the 45 strike is the same contract they use, but expiration length of time is simply “tacked” on when you buy more time? So the broker recognizes when a roll occurred on the same strike? And does it have to be the same work order or can it be done a few minutes later or hours later before close of day?Options drive me nuts but I think I’m getting it. Thanks!

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +5

      Hello!
      Not a stupid question, but no need to make it so complex - it's simply closing one contract and opening another one. Don't think about it as the brokerage re-writing the current contract. Just consider the contract you're closing closed, and the new contract is a brand new open trade. That is how it will appear on your platform.
      The reason why we can roll for a credit is because there is more extrinsic value in the next month we're rolling to compared to the current month, so we can extend duration, collect more premium and give ourselves more time to be correct.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +7

      There is no difference between rolling in one transaction, and closing your current trade and opening a new one a few minutes later - they're just separate transactions and the pricing may be different.

    • @baba10ye
      @baba10ye 3 года назад

      @@tastyliveshow going does the brokerage show the 1.75 or 5.75 on the price limit?

  • @robertc.benson6361
    @robertc.benson6361 3 года назад

    Question, if initially roll a put to the next month when my strike is hit. When and were do I do the next rolls if need be?

  • @vfxhouse6499
    @vfxhouse6499 4 года назад

    out of all your naked trades, what % of these trades would you say you roll vs hold till expiration? and are u usually rolling at 21dte? Also most importantly, if you have the cash do you find it favorable to take assignment on a naked put then selling calls on the shares vs rolling?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад

      It's hard to give a % but I don't hold many trades to expiration - I also don't take stock because it's not as efficient as holding the option, and stock has no extrinsic value, so I'd rather just roll the option if it's ITM and I can keep collecting extrinsic value rolling it. 21 DTE is more for undefined risk trades, and I stick to that to avoid gamma risk if I'm approaching that timeframe, but I can and do roll before that if something happens.

    • @vfxhouse6499
      @vfxhouse6499 4 года назад

      @@tastyliveshow awesome thx! I can see the advantage of not taking on the stock but
      1.)what if there is a quick jump to deep ITM and you no longer can roll for a credit?? are you normally just closing out at a loss in this circumstance?
      2.)what's the furthest out you would roll to achieve a credit? 60days too much?
      3.) not a question but just checking to see if this is accurate? : Rolling out in time can keep the dream alive but it also can give the stock more time to plummet, in which case you can lose way more money but I guess that can happen anytime before or after a roll, and why you mention we have to have the same bullish outlook. the fact remains by rolling (for credit) you are lowering yr breakneven.

  • @surajsheshadri
    @surajsheshadri 2 года назад

    How to roll spreads.. its not same as naked options from my experience

  • @SouravGhoshkulti
    @SouravGhoshkulti 4 года назад

    it doesn't need extra margin/fund during rollover?
    Because I am taking Loss & then my funds also get reduced. So for selling next Expiry CALL of same Premium (i.e. getting Credit) I need additional funds in a/c. Am I right ?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад

      You do not - your account dropping from the loss has already happened - in some cases your buying power required to place the trade will actually decrease, if you're collecting a credit during the roll as that offsets your risk by that amount. If you move the strike closer to the stock price that could that increase your buying power required, but sticking to the same strike typically does not.

  • @routerpete1674
    @routerpete1674 4 года назад

    On TastyWorks platform, with the social aspects of it we're able to see what the members do, including you, Mike. I see a lot of rolls on there. Why? a) Why not put it OTM more and manage it less? b)Is it because you all try to hit ATM for max profits and as a result need to adjust more frequently?
    Thanks...

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад

      It's typically OTM trades that move to being ATM or slightly ITM, and we're rolling to add more extrinsic value and time to the position. It's rare that we start ATM.

  • @alexlu713
    @alexlu713 4 года назад

    Does rolling a covered call indefinitely make sense if I don't want to the contract to be exercised? For example, I own 100 shares of XYZ at $50 and sold a contract of CALL at strike price of $55. Before the contract expires, XYZ jumps to $57 a share, does it make sense to roll the covered call at a monthly basis until it return under $55? I guess the worse case is it never returns to under $55 and my max gain would be capped at $5 + whatever many rolling credits I receive, correct? Thanks.

    • @MWAHAHAHAHA414
      @MWAHAHAHAHA414 3 года назад

      That’s my exact scenario now on my first options trade. As long as I can roll it out and receive a credit, I’m giving the stock time to maybe move back below the strike and I keep all the premiums and the shares. Is my thinking correct? Now if stock keeps running and is away above strike, at some point you may have to just throw in the towel and lose your shares.

  • @drrajesh4300
    @drrajesh4300 5 лет назад

    Hello.. in case of buying a OTM call option and the trend is reversing at the expiry,can I roll it to the near month..if so,how much I lose and any extra buying power should I need.. kindly let me know

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +1

      You pay for options up front, so any roll would be based on that value. You would collect a bit back by removing time value, but you'd be putting yourself in a higher probability situation to lose the full value of the new option.

  • @vrlab5660
    @vrlab5660 3 года назад

    Can we roll at different strike price? for instance lower than the initial put $45? something like selling $35 put? why does it have to be same strike price?

    • @michaelgreen6974
      @michaelgreen6974 3 года назад

      It doesn't have to be same K. If my short put is deep ITM I look for one less ITM that will still net premium. Taking assignment at the lower K makes it easier to sell good calls against resulting position.

  • @kavinguo7640
    @kavinguo7640 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for the video. I'm new to Option trading, is there a way to roll a long call option?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад +4

      Sure - same concept just the opposite transaction. You'd be selling your long call at X expiration and buying a new call at a further expiration - this would cost a debit, which means your breakeven is worse, and your max loss increases, but you would be increasing time to be right.

    • @wandabrowne8313
      @wandabrowne8313 3 года назад

      @@tastyliveshow thanks

  • @thenothingchannel457
    @thenothingchannel457 5 лет назад

    Hi does this mean the max profit for these series of roll is $1.70? And i can achieve breakeven if i close the new short put @ $3.35 = $5.05-$1.70

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +3

      Yes it is, if the new put expires OTM, the overall profit would be $1.70 and you'd wipe out the realized loss. Breakeven is achieved if the put is BOUGHT BACK for $1.70, which would mean on your platform you'd actually see a $4.05 "profit" on the new option. If you collect $1.70, you need to buy back the option for $1.70 to breakeven. Buying it back at $3.35 would realize a $1.65 loss. I talk about this at 8:00

  • @Sodr7
    @Sodr7 3 года назад

    If someone purchased the contract and I roll it and open a new one, how does that affect the buyer of the contract. Is there zero extrinsic value on that contract and they are done with it?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  3 года назад

      Nope - their position would still be active - there is never a scenario where you and someone else are in the same position - it's a fluid market.

  • @AD-md5uk
    @AD-md5uk 5 лет назад

    So is this the same for put/call credit spreads when you roll for a credit you 'reduce cost basis which reduces max loss' thanks.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад

      Yes - if you collect more credit, you reduce max loss because that new credit offsets risk.

  • @sirajelsamra8170
    @sirajelsamra8170 4 года назад

    Mike, You talking about making a losing trade on the .35 delta vs the .6 delta. you didnt go over that the expring trade is probably at .98 delta at the time that you're rolling...

  • @adventures1670
    @adventures1670 3 года назад

    is rolling an option contract considered a taxable event or is it when you close the position?

    • @theotherguy6155
      @theotherguy6155 3 года назад

      yes, any realized gain or loss is taxable

  • @Juju-ch5it
    @Juju-ch5it 8 лет назад +1

    If you roll the position and it doesn't go the way you were betting, do you end up losing double the money? $4400 and $4330 for a loss of $8730? Didn't completely understand that part.
    THANKS!

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  8 лет назад +3

      William,
      You don't - you actually reduce cost basis which reduces max loss. In the example, my original break even point was $4400 from the original put I sold:
      45 strike, $1.00 credit = 44.00 breakeven
      When I rolled the position, I BOUGHT back the losing put for $5.05 in SEP, and sold a new option in OCT for $5.75. I only have one short put at this time, not two. Rolling is just closing the current option and opening a new one.
      The intrinsic value is the same at 5.00 in both options, so I'm netting a 70 cent credit in extrinsic value. That 70 cent net credit is used to lower my breakeven from 44.00 to 43.30. Even if the stock goes bankrupt, I only have one short put, and would have collected $1.70 in net credit ($1.00 originally, $0.70 roll credit), which would put me at a loss of $4330 since my strike is at 45.

    • @Juju-ch5it
      @Juju-ch5it 8 лет назад +2

      +tastytrade Thank you! Such a helpful network.

  • @jaysant6958
    @jaysant6958 6 лет назад

    So like if you can just keep rolling naked options forever until you're right, what exactly is the risk or why doesn't everyone do that? Why ever settle for a loss?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  6 лет назад +5

      Mainly because people are uncomfortable with losses, or have an assumption that has changed. There is no guarantee that a stock will recover, but historically speaking, the stock market as a whole has recovered from the crashes it's endured.

  • @sanbetski
    @sanbetski 5 лет назад

    when you roll a naked put and incur realized loss, can you use that loss for tax purposes or will that be a wash sale? thanks!

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад

      Good question! Unfortunately, I don't have that answer as it may depend on the timeframe, etc. I would reach out to a tax professional for an answer on that one.

  • @kl8922
    @kl8922 6 лет назад +1

    Whew, I can see the risks with rolling over the naked puts in that case. So I sell my call at $1 per contract and have to buy back at $5.05 per contract, which is already a hefty loss of $4.05 per contract, and then I have to gamble with a lesser probability at 35% by selling an IN THE MONEY put with the prospect of believing that this stock will head back up. Say that next month, your "directional assumption" is wrong and your stock goes to $35. Will I roll over AGAIN by buying back what I sold for possibly $10 per contract and roll out by selling an even higher price of $11 per contract? It seems to me I am in pretty deep sh1t at this point.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  6 лет назад

      At some point we may consider restructuring the trade - if we're not collecting too much in extrinsic value then the trade is very directional - of course trades can continue to go against us resulting in big losses, but the idea here is that if we get two sided markets and we continue to chip away at our cost basis and have SOME cooperation with the stock, we can end up in the green eventually by rolling as opposed to closing the trade for a loss in the first expiration.

  • @promitbanerjee2623
    @promitbanerjee2623 7 лет назад

    PLEASE DO CORRECT ME IF I AM WRONG,
    THE SCENARIO AFTER THE OCT PUT HAS BEEN SOLD IS
    1.43.30 IS THE BREAKEVEN.
    2. BELOW 43.30 IT IS ALL LOSS.
    3. IF THE STOCK STAYS ABOVE 45, WE GET TO KEEP THE CREDIT RECEIVED, I.E 1.70 (LOSSES aDJUSTED).
    pLEASE DO rEPLY.

  • @jeffreysmith6873
    @jeffreysmith6873 3 года назад +1

    why not close and open separately? Instead of rolling? What is the differnece..?

    • @BKPS3
      @BKPS3 3 года назад +1

      If you are a good trader you will probably go better doing it separately. But the risk is the movement in price of the new exp. leg (with could lead to a better or a worse transaction).

  • @hsimons181
    @hsimons181 2 года назад +1

    too much waffling doesnt get to the point , makes it seem like trading is difficult

  • @PardeepKumar-tc3ws
    @PardeepKumar-tc3ws 8 лет назад

    Can you please explain how Max Loss $4400 is calculated? As upto my understanding it is called that loss in short position can be unlimited because firstly we are selling the option and in future we don't upto what extent the price can rise, so theoretically its said that loss can be unlimited

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  8 лет назад +5

      That is true for selling call options - an underlying has no cap to the upside, so loss can truly be unlimited. With selling a put, however, an underlying cannot go below $0.00 in price, so that is where our max loss would be. If I sell a 45 put, I am selling the right to someone else to sell their shares to me at the $45.00 per share. A put contract has the theoretical equivalent of 100 shares of stock, so that is $4,500. However, I sold the put contract for $1.00 per share or $100, so my max loss is only $4,400.

    • @PardeepKumar-tc3ws
      @PardeepKumar-tc3ws 8 лет назад

      got it, thx

  • @highdesert9
    @highdesert9 5 лет назад

    If an option contract can be exercised at any point during the life of the contract and the stock price falls below the strike price why wouldn’t that contract be Exercised by the contract holder For a profit. In the case of your example five dollars per share?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад

      Because that option has extrinsic value. If you exercise an option and turn it into stock, you burn that extrinsic value. Most traders just SELL out of their long options to retain the extrinsic value. which means there is no assignment in the short position. Assignment is rare as long as there is extrinsic value in the option, even if it is deep ITM.

    • @highdesert9
      @highdesert9 5 лет назад +1

      tastytrade ok I get it thanks

  • @SuicidelG
    @SuicidelG 2 года назад

    Always roll down and out for puts if you're going to roll...never just out.

  • @jischkebd
    @jischkebd 3 года назад

    Do you ever roll winning trades? I've noticed that sometimes my P/L will excede my max gain and if I try to close it it will show me a credit price.

    • @davidlight5156
      @davidlight5156 3 года назад

      Someone help me figure this at... I have 3 450 nov calls. should I roll 1 over? I'm not going to sleep until I get an answer.

    • @dontswin
      @dontswin 2 года назад

      @@davidlight5156 You've got to very tired by now, LOL!

  • @kbram7363
    @kbram7363 2 года назад

    Should have just rolled a naked call instead of rolling for credit.

  • @MrJking1962
    @MrJking1962 5 лет назад

    Is this a form of doubling down?

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  5 лет назад +2

      It is not - rolling is closing the current option and opening a new one in a new expiration, so I'm just moving the trade out in time here. Not doubling down in terms of contracts, but increasing the time I am in the trade.

  • @HassMak86
    @HassMak86 2 года назад

    There is absolutely no difference or advantage in rolling versus selling your current call position and buying a new position. I see no reason to do a call, and no one can give me one either.

  • @jayti6828
    @jayti6828 5 месяцев назад

    This roll over thing is very confusing. 🤔😑😮‍💨

  • @bsdgffishtuna5186
    @bsdgffishtuna5186 4 года назад

    why start with a naked put. Why not a basic call? a buy. way simpler for teaching.

    • @tastyliveshow
      @tastyliveshow  4 года назад

      Only because rolling a long call out in time costs a debit, which makes breakevens worse, net cost higher etc. It's the complete opposite of how short premium improves these numbers.

  • @aristrudel8017
    @aristrudel8017 4 года назад +10

    So this is what the kids these days mean when they talk about "rolling"

    • @teli4181
      @teli4181 4 года назад +3

      They see me rollin'
      They hatin'

  • @changjoe01
    @changjoe01 3 года назад

    In the spot market, this is holding onto losers.

  • @jamisonmunn9215
    @jamisonmunn9215 3 года назад

    Dreaming is not a valid investment strategy.

  • @earthlastdaybiblechannel
    @earthlastdaybiblechannel 3 года назад

    led zeppelin

  • @annihilationHaven
    @annihilationHaven 8 лет назад

    Very good to know, however it is useless for me as my broker doesn't allow me to sell naked puts.