Generate consistent income with a smart weekly options strategy
Profiting From Weekly Options is a clear, practical guide to earning consistent income from trading options. Rather than confuse readers with complex math formulas, this book concentrates on the process of consistently profiting from weekly option serials by utilizing a series of simple trades. Backed by the author's thirty years of experience as a professional option trader and market maker, these ideas and techniques allow active individual traders and investors to generate regular income while mitigating risk. Readers will learn the fundamental mechanisms that drive weekly options, the market forces that affect them, and the analysis techniques that help them manage trades.
Weekly options are structured like conventional monthly options, but they expire each week. Interest has surged since their inception three years ago, and currently accounts for up to thirty percent of total option volume, traded on all major indices as well as high volume stocks and ETFs. This book is a guide to using weekly options efficiently and effectively as income-generating investments, with practical guidance and expert advice on strategy and implementation.
- Discover the cycles and market dynamics at work
- Learn essential fundamental and technical analysis techniques
- Understand the option trading lexicon and lifecycle
- Gain confidence in managing trades and mitigating risk
Weekly options can be integrated with any existing options strategy, but they are particularly conducive to credit spread strategies and short-term trades based on technical patterns. For investors looking for an easy-in/easy-out method of generating consistent income, Profiting From Weekly Options provides the wisdom of experience with practical, actionable advice.
Autorentext
ROBERT J. SEIFERT is an independent options trader with over 38 years in the securities industry. He has published articles in Barron's and the Wall Street Journal describing his unique and highly regarded trading model.
Klappentext
Generate consistent income with a smart weekly options
strategy
Profiting From Weekly Options is a clear, practical guide
to earning consistent income from trading options. Rather than
confuse readers with complex math formulas, this book concentrates
on the process of consistently profiting from weekly option serials
by utilizing a series of simple trades. Backed by the author's
thirty years of experience as a professional option trader and
market maker, these ideas and techniques allow active individual
traders and investors to generate regular income while mitigating
risk. Readers will learn the fundamental mechanisms that drive
weekly options, the market forces that affect them, and the
analysis techniques that help them manage trades.
Weekly options are structured like conventional monthly options,
but they expire each week. Interest has surged since their
inception three years ago, and currently accounts for up to thirty
percent of total option volume, traded on all major indices as well
as high volume stocks and ETFs. This book is a guide to using
weekly options efficiently and effectively as income-generating
investments, with practical guidance and expert advice on strategy
and implementation.
* Discover the cycles and market dynamics at work
* Learn essential fundamental and technical analysis
techniques
* Understand the option trading lexicon and lifecycle
* Gain confidence in managing trades and mitigating risk
Weekly options can be integrated with any existing options
strategy, but they are particularly conducive to credit spread
strategies and short-term trades based on technical patterns. For
investors looking for an easy-in/easy-out method of generating
consistent income, Profiting From Weekly Options provides
the wisdom of experience with practical, actionable advice.
Inhalt
Foreword xiii
Todd ''Bubba'' Horwitz
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xvii
Chapter 1 Market Psychology: The Mind-Set of a Trader 1
The Herd Mentality: Bubbles 2
The South Sea Bubble 17111721: Trade, War, and Government Collusion 2
The Cotton Panic of 1837: Land, Commodities, and Government 4
The Panic of 1893: Railroads Have No Upper Limit 6
September 11, 2001: Price Can Never Go Up Again 7
The Commodity Bubble of 2008: Price Can Never Go Down Again 8
Bitcoin 2009 to Present: Crypto-Currency Meets Greed 10
Lessons to Be Learned 11
Chapter 1 Quiz 12
Chapter 2 Modern Markets 15
Equity Markets 15
Liquidity 16
Flow of Funds 17
Futures Markets: Origins 18
Calculating Future Contract Values 18
Tick Size 19
Margin 20
Stock Index Futures 20
Index Futures versus Stock 21
Forex: Currencies 22
Options 22
Summary 23
Chapter 2 Quiz 23
Chapter 3 Technical versus Fundamental Price Analysis 27
Summary 29
Chapter 3 Quiz 29
Chapter 4 Phases of the Market 31
Congestion 31
Breakout to the Trend 33
Blowoff 35
Summary 37
Chapter 4 Quiz 37
Chapter 5 The Relationship of Time and Price 41
Summary 47
Chapter 5 Quiz 48
Chapter 6 Introduction to Options 51
Basic Option Glossary 51
Working Option Vocabulary 56
Summary 58
Chapter 6 Quiz 58
Chapter 7 The Option Model 63
Games of Chance 63
Air in the Balloon 66
Summary 67
Chapter 7 Quiz 67
Chapter 8 The Option Chain 71
Summary 80
Chapter 8 Quiz 80
Chapter 9 Option Trading Strategies 83
Why Selling Naked Options is Always Wrong! 83
Suitable Option Trades 85
The Credit Spread 91
Summary 99
Chapter 9 Quiz 100
Chapter 10 Why Trade Weekly Options? 105
Buying a Call or a Put Outright 110
Summary 112
Chapter 10 Quiz 113
Chapter 11 Midterm Review 115
Psychology 116
Liquidity 116
Market Pricing 116
Phases of the Market 117
Relationship of Time and Price 117
Option Vocabulary 117
Summary 118
Test for Chapters 110 119
Chapter 12 Standard DeviationThe Mathematics of the Price Cycle 127
Summary 131
Chapter 12 Quiz 131
Chapter 13 Trading in a Congestion Phase of the Market 133
Trade One: Buying an Outright Option 136
Trade Two: Credit Spreads 139
Trade Three: Risk Reversals 143
Trade Four: Backspread (1 × 2 for Even) 146
Summary 150
Chapter 13 Quiz 151
Chapter 14 Trading in a Trending Phase of the Market 155
Trade One: Buying an Outright Option 156
Trade Two: Credit Spreads 160
Trade Three: Risk Reversals 163
Trade Four: Backspread (1 × 2 for Even) 165
Summary 167
Chapter 14 Quiz 168
Chapter 15 Trading in the Blowoff Phase of the Market 173
Trade One: Buying an Outright Option 175
Trade Two: Credit Spreads 177
Trade Three: Risk Reversals 180
Trade Four: Backspread (1 × 2 for Even) 182
Summary 183
Chapter 15 Quiz 183
Chapter 16 Selecting a Portfolio to Trade 187
Liquidity 188
Volatility 190
Diversification by Product 190
D...