Most people don't understand that technical analysis is based on projections and working with the probabilities in your favor, it's not a crystal ball like many say , it's about making projections on possible bullish or bearish scenarios, so that you can make a good strategy, such as your entry point, your stop loss and your target. This is what technical analysis, like. Now many, don't take them seriously, I've also made fun of it a lot when I didn't understand absolutely anything and didn't even try to understand...currently I've been engaged in active trading and managed to grow a nest egg of around 2.3Bitcoin to a decent 24Bitcoin....I'm especially grateful to Linda Wilburn, whose deep expertise and traditional trading acumen have been invaluable in this challenging, ever-evolving financial landscape.
What I appreciate about Linda Wilburn. is her ability to tailor strategies to individual needs. She recognizes that each investor has unique goals and risk tolerances, and she adapts her advice accordingly.
I bought a call on NVIDIA last week thinking it would go up after the earnings report. That option has lost 99% of its value and I am scared to touch options now.
I ended up buying calls on SPY which I never do but I was nervous to play NVIDIA so I thought a good earnings pump from nvda would pump spy the next day. I did great and sold the call catching SPY at the peak just below the highest today. Meanwhile nvidia tanked. Sometimes you just gotta play the proxies.
Whats the expiration? I would keep it open. I know theta is against you in this situation but you may be able to get some of that money back. Buyers are the betters…similar to gambling. Just stick with the wheel strategy selling calls and puts.
Basically, it’s a leverage thing. If you buy 100 shares of Apple at, for example, $200, you are $20,000 invested and if that stock somehow tanked (unlikely, but could happen) your $20,000 will drop with it. Or, you could buy an option for Apple. Let’s say the stock price is sitting at 200, you could buy a call option at $5 a share if you think it will go up, or a put option at $5 a share if you think it will go down. That options price will fluctuate as the stock changes, the idea is to sell that option back for more than you bought it for. If you buy a call and the stock rises, you win. If you buy a put and the stock lowers, you still win. This is essentially gambling as no one but Warren Buffett knows where it will go lol. To play it safe, you can sell options instead. To do this, you need to own 100 shares of that stock. You can then sell a”put” option at, for example, $5 a share with hopes that the stock does not drop so the buyer doesn’t take your shares. If the stock stays above the strike price on your sold “put” option, you get to keep the stocks after the expiration date and you still get the money earned from selling the option. This is a much safer route but takes a lot more capital to get started. I hope this helps
@@TheGridironX_safe to say that the ideal way to profit on call options is to sell back the option once it gains in value - right? I.e. you buy calls 3-4 weeks out that are a few $$ higher than the current market price > with a good delta (0.50+). And as that stock goes up in value over the coming days and weeks, you cash out (sell the option) at profit. You don’t necessarily wait for the expiration, you sell back the option when you have x% gains. I.e. AAPL is $230 today. You buy call options at $235 three weeks out. AAPL starts climbing to 240>245 and you sell the option as that option is now printing cash.
I've been purchasing stocks since the beginning of the year, but nothing has changed. However, I've been reading articles about people who are still in the same market who have made over $350,000 in just a few months. What am I doing incorrectly?
Just open any other video of him , i highly recommended Henry He gives a lot of material for free, you can not blame the guy for not pushing his discord, good luck fella
Most people don't understand that technical analysis is based on projections and working with the probabilities in your favor, it's not a crystal ball like many say , it's about making projections on possible bullish or bearish scenarios, so that you can make a good strategy, such as your entry point, your stop loss and your target. This is what technical analysis, like. Now many, don't take them seriously, I've also made fun of it a lot when I didn't understand absolutely anything and didn't even try to understand...currently I've been engaged in active trading and managed to grow a nest egg of around 2.3Bitcoin to a decent 24Bitcoin....I'm especially grateful to Linda Wilburn, whose deep expertise and traditional trading acumen have been invaluable in this challenging, ever-evolving financial landscape.
She's often interacts on Telegrams, using the user-name.
@Lindawilburn
What I appreciate about Linda Wilburn. is her ability to tailor strategies to individual needs. She recognizes that each investor has unique goals and risk tolerances, and she adapts her advice accordingly.
Trading with an expert is the best strategy for beginners and busy investor s who have little or no time to monitor their trades.
I appreciate the professionalism and dedication of the team behind Linda’s trade signal service.
Wow I can't even comprehend how it must feel to have 2 millions dollars in an account. Well done my friend.
thank you I can’t figure out charles schwab options
@@robertnicoletti take the free courses...and use their TOS Paper money platform until you figure it out.
I bought a call on NVIDIA last week thinking it would go up after the earnings report. That option has lost 99% of its value and I am scared to touch options now.
Should bought puts on it
I ended up buying calls on SPY which I never do but I was nervous to play NVIDIA so I thought a good earnings pump from nvda would pump spy the next day.
I did great and sold the call catching SPY at the peak just below the highest today. Meanwhile nvidia tanked.
Sometimes you just gotta play the proxies.
GG BRO
Buying calls around earnings like going to Vegas and playing roulette... Do small trades... u'll b ok
Whats the expiration? I would keep it open. I know theta is against you in this situation but you may be able to get some of that money back. Buyers are the betters…similar to gambling. Just stick with the wheel strategy selling calls and puts.
Thank you so much for breaking this down!
Would you buy a leap for a stock on a red day? Thank you!
can you do a video on how to do an option for bullish situations but enough of a safeguard not to lose too much money.
@@kitsch590 Buy a leap call ...then sell shorter DTE Covered calls. Do some research on strike selection first tho.
@@kitsch590 good question
To buy a leap in Robinhood you have to be level 3 and control one hundred shares of that stock or the collateral
What's the difference between this and just buying shares regularly? I can't wrap my head around this
Basically, it’s a leverage thing. If you buy 100 shares of Apple at, for example, $200, you are $20,000 invested and if that stock somehow tanked (unlikely, but could happen) your $20,000 will drop with it.
Or, you could buy an option for Apple. Let’s say the stock price is sitting at 200, you could buy a call option at $5 a share if you think it will go up, or a put option at $5 a share if you think it will go down.
That options price will fluctuate as the stock changes, the idea is to sell that option back for more than you bought it for. If you buy a call and the stock rises, you win. If you buy a put and the stock lowers, you still win.
This is essentially gambling as no one but Warren Buffett knows where it will go lol.
To play it safe, you can sell options instead. To do this, you need to own 100 shares of that stock. You can then sell a”put” option at, for example, $5 a share with hopes that the stock does not drop so the buyer doesn’t take your shares. If the stock stays above the strike price on your sold “put” option, you get to keep the stocks after the expiration date and you still get the money earned from selling the option. This is a much safer route but takes a lot more capital to get started. I hope this helps
@@TheGridironX_safe to say that the ideal way to profit on call options is to sell back the option once it gains in value - right?
I.e. you buy calls 3-4 weeks out that are a few $$ higher than the current market price > with a good delta (0.50+). And as that stock goes up in value over the coming days and weeks, you cash out (sell the option) at profit.
You don’t necessarily wait for the expiration, you sell back the option when you have x% gains.
I.e. AAPL is $230 today. You buy call options at $235 three weeks out. AAPL starts climbing to 240>245 and you sell the option as that option is now printing cash.
Thank you for this video Henry❤
It says to join Discord, but there's no link?
You didn’t talk about how to execute taking profits prior to expiration
Orders are hidden, so you don't see them, the broker won't show you these orders.
You don't see all orders.
first-- limit risk to 2 pct
pick a rising stock
Thanks Henry. Bought a $77 leap exp Dec 2026 today on NVDA (insert nervous laughter)
What strike?
Henry add the LINK buddy ❤ youtlr channel
ALPP Apple
I've been purchasing stocks since the beginning of the year, but nothing has changed. However, I've been reading articles about people who are still in the same market who have made over $350,000 in just a few months. What am I doing incorrectly?
I’ve been looking to switch to an advisor for a while now. Any help pointing me to who your advisor is?
I just curiously searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon. Thank you
Beware of scammers
wow
Win big lose big
First 😊
Someone send me the discord link
Just open any other video of him , i highly recommended Henry
He gives a lot of material for free, you can not blame the guy for not pushing his discord, good luck fella
I’m giving money invest harry. future. no doubt