only my second video and this is easily the best education for options because you use candles and charts to show how everything works. Everyone else is showing bland slides and written statements or screenshots of options chains. How am I supposed to follow along?
I have been using your OptionPlay platform and utilizing the spread setups. That gives me so much confidence and knowledge to step into trade transactions. Just, I would like to thank you.
I traded stocks , futures, options, for years and lost a boat load of money because I didn't have regimen, discipline and deep knowledge of risk management. This young man has been perfecting his craft at hand and it shows. I saw a ton of trade platforms and so called Guru traders, but I am now finally on my way to profits and a regime of trading habits. I am sold . 100% this guy is in top of class . CNBC has him on for obvious reasons. Thank you for sharing the knowledge!
Hi, could you go through the credit spread management just like you did for debit spread? Basically talk about the same key points mentioned in the debit spread webinar for the credit spread
Hey Tony, great to see you still doing this content. I have employed so many credit spreads since first seeing your videos in 2020. Really suitable for beginners to focus on this strategy and get started with regular profitability. All the best!
Do you take into consideration the Intrinsic Value of a stock when placing a bull put credit spread? IE. If the trend has been upward, but it's approaching the intrinsic value of the company...would you hesitate to believe the uptrend might come to a screeching halt?? and probably capitulate or start a downward trend???
Question: if someone opens up a credit spread with an expiration a year in the future, would they be charged interest for that year for holding this position open? And do credit spreads use margin, with a margin borrowing charge?
So let’s keep the 40% example. If I collect 4 dollars and max loss is 6 dollars on a 10 dollar wide spread , your rules say to exit with 50% gain which is 2.00. Let’s say I win 2 out of every 3 trades. So two wins in a row is 4.00 or 400 dollars. One loss at 8 dollars (100% of premium collected) is a loss of 400 since you collected 400. This would only put you at breakeven. So don’t we need to update the strategy when more than 1/3 of the width is collected? Because the current rules don’t matter whether you collect 33% or 40%+. They essentially keep it 2:1 rather than 1.5:1. Would it be better in this example to take 75% of the premium collected as a stop loss which is 7.00 rather than the 8? That way for every two wins, your net gain is 100 assuming you win 2 out of every 3 (200 win + 200 win - 300 loss) vs. the current rules which brings you to net even. (200 win + 200 win - 400 loss).
I am a options play user and have made an observation regarding the credit spreads that you post on the si t e. Most examples I see in you teaching are 5 or most frequently $10 wide. Most of the posted trades are $15 wide or much more. Can you explain why?
Unless you already have the actual shares to sell a covered call against, selling a naked call (even with a stop loss) requires a huge amount of margin. Not to mention many option accounts don't initially allow selling naked calls. The distant long leg is just there to protect you in case the option goes in the money against you. It also limits the margin requirement. Of course, you do pay a premium (the long option price) for that protection. If you stop yourself out you eliminate the possibility of the option reversing to out of the money status (your ultimate goal).
only my second video and this is easily the best education for options because you use candles and charts to show how everything works. Everyone else is showing bland slides and written statements or screenshots of options chains. How am I supposed to follow along?
I have been using your OptionPlay platform and utilizing the spread setups. That gives me so much confidence and knowledge to step into trade transactions. Just, I would like to thank you.
Great to hear!
I traded stocks , futures, options, for years and lost a boat load of money because I didn't have regimen, discipline and deep knowledge of risk management. This young man has been perfecting his craft at hand and it shows. I saw a ton of trade platforms and so called Guru traders, but I am now finally on my way to profits and a regime of trading habits. I am sold . 100% this guy is in top of class . CNBC has him on for obvious reasons. Thank you for sharing the knowledge!
nobody explain this the way is explain in this video very good job.
Hi, could you go through the credit spread management just like you did for debit spread? Basically talk about the same key points mentioned in the debit spread webinar for the credit spread
Hey Tony, great to see you still doing this content. I have employed so many credit spreads since first seeing your videos in 2020. Really suitable for beginners to focus on this strategy and get started with regular profitability. All the best!
Tony, Great teaching. Keep up the good work.
How do you utilize the 50, 150, 200 SMA on deciding when to enter a credit spread???
Do you take into consideration the Intrinsic Value of a stock when placing a bull put credit spread? IE. If the trend has been upward, but it's approaching the intrinsic value of the company...would you hesitate to believe the uptrend might come to a screeching halt?? and probably capitulate or start a downward trend???
Is that mandatory to select "High IV"?
Tony, great video!
Question: if someone opens up a credit spread with an expiration a year in the future, would they be charged interest for that year for holding this position open? And do credit spreads use margin, with a margin borrowing charge?
Hi Tony, I am a beginner. How do I subscribe to get this Real Time Credit Spread Report? Thanks for the video.
How do you access the REAL TIME CREDIT SPREADS OPPORTUNITY REPORT
What is the equation that’s shows the amount of winners required to breakeven?
So let’s keep the 40% example. If I collect 4 dollars and max loss is 6 dollars on a 10 dollar wide spread , your rules say to exit with 50% gain which is 2.00. Let’s say I win 2 out of every 3 trades. So two wins in a row is 4.00 or 400 dollars. One loss at 8 dollars (100% of premium collected) is a loss of 400 since you collected 400. This would only put you at breakeven. So don’t we need to update the strategy when more than 1/3 of the width is collected? Because the current rules don’t matter whether you collect 33% or 40%+. They essentially keep it 2:1 rather than 1.5:1. Would it be better in this example to take 75% of the premium collected as a stop loss which is 7.00 rather than the 8? That way for every two wins, your net gain is 100 assuming you win 2 out of every 3 (200 win + 200 win - 300 loss) vs. the current rules which brings you to net even. (200 win + 200 win - 400 loss).
I am a options play user and have made an observation regarding the credit spreads that you post on the si t e. Most examples I see in you teaching are 5 or most frequently $10 wide. Most of the posted trades are $15 wide or much more. Can you explain why?
There’s not a way to contact them on their platform ?
Could you explain ndx put credit spreads. Would really appreciate it.
why not low delta credit spreds or high delta debit spreads? 0.11 to 0.17 Deltas ... wouldn't that increase you chance of profit ?
Yes
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isnt this similar to selling a call option, but having a stoploss instead of a long call at higher strike?
Unless you already have the actual shares to sell a covered call against, selling a naked call (even with a stop loss) requires a huge amount of margin. Not to mention many option accounts don't initially allow selling naked calls. The distant long leg is just there to protect you in case the option goes in the money against you. It also limits the margin requirement. Of course, you do pay a premium (the long option price) for that protection. If you stop yourself out you eliminate the possibility of the option reversing to out of the money status (your ultimate goal).
What? Selling ATM spread is way riskier than otm
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Missing the greeks analysis for Credit Spread...
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Do not do credit spreads! I blew my $250,000 account! It's all gone!
Well, don’t you think that’s your fault for having poor risk management?
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