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My Rules for Options Trading

Friday, July 13, 2007 | Teeka Tiwari

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The Dow is making new highs!  WHOO HOO, break out the champagne baby! 

Er, not!  Thirty stocks do not a market make. 

The metals sector is red hot right now, and yesterday's takeover of Alcan by Rio Tinto has reignited such stalwart names as Alcoa, which also happens to be a DOW component.

The time to be aggressively buying stocks is when people hate them, not when the collective masses love them. 

Last summer, bombs were dropping in Beirut and yours truly was pounding the table to own stocks.  You should have seen the hate mail I received!  It was enough to transform the saltiest of sailors into a shrinking violet!

It ain’t easy to buck mass psychology, but it’s very profitable.  To maximize your gains, you want to buy when stocks are hated, and sell when stocks are adored.  You will not catch the bottom, and you will not catch the top, BUT you will catch a whole lot of meat in the middle.  Just as important, you will be taking a fraction of the risk of the typical investor.

The broad market, as measured by my internal indicators, is sick.  Events like yesterday's rally are excellent opportunities to short stocks.  Yes, there will be pockets of strength in any market, and that strength is skewing the indexes right now.  But the broader market is actually getting weaker, not stronger.

I wrote an article the other week that details some of the steps that you can take RIGHT NOW to identify some great shorting candidates.  When going short, my favorite trading tools to use are PUT options.  The simple reason is that you can strictly define how much you are willing to risk.  You can never lose more than you put up, unlike shorting a stock, where the risk is theoretically unlimited.

But there are some rules you need to know before plunging head first into the choppy waters of options:

With options, time is your friend.  The worst feeling in the world is being dead right in your analysis and a day late on your options expiration cycle!  So always BUY TIME!  You want to go out a minimum of five months on your options, and preferably six months.

The second rule I use is that I want to buy DEEP IN THE MONEY, at least five points in the money.  Yes, you give up a factor of leverage by doing this, but you also dramatically increase the odds of creating a profitable trade.

You have multiple forces working against you when you put on a PUT trade, and you want to be able to counter them.  By buying deep in the money, you help insure against total loss in your position if the underlying stock does nothing at all.

Research indicates that 68% of the time, sectors, ergo stocks, are within one standard deviation of the mean.  That means that most of the time they are just “middling” and not doing a whole lot.  Buying PUTS deep in the money helps insulate you to a degree from the very large statistical odds of the stock doing nothing at all.

Additionally, by going deep in the money, your Delta (delta is a measurement of how closely your option mimics the action of the underlying stock) will be much closer to 1 to 1.  That is, for every one point move in the underlying stock, your option will move one point.

Use common sense, and remember to start out small until you get comfortable.  It’s OK to just trade one contract at a time until you build up your confidence.  It’s a learning process, and losing money is a great teacher!  Just make sure that you’re not going hog wild.  Think of this as just one approach that you can employ in your arsenal of investment weapons.

Remember that option trading should only be part of your overall investment plan, NOT THE WHOLE THING!


Related Articles:  Profit from the Upcoming Crash: A Trader's Blueprint, Is This Rally Real or Fake?, Limit Your Risk, Save Yourself from a Sharp Correction, How to Buy Puts. I'll Spell it Out for You.



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Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
ETF Master Trader


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23 Comments

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  1. Harry G (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Excellant article. I always wanted to know about options. I have printed the article for future reference. Thanks a lot. HP
  2. Jim C (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Very good advice on options,dip your toe in the water fist before jumping in the water.Very good advice about buying when everybody hates stocks and selling when they love them.You won't catch some of the upside,but you won't be devestated on the way down.
  3. Ben D (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka:



    I have been a long time subscriber to "Option Hotline by Steve Sarnoff. He always suggests a specific trade "out of the money." His track record for the the last 10 years is 98% profitable trades. I guess that there is more than one way to skin a cat. Your way makes perfect sense, and I only use "high risk" money to buy puts and calls via Option Hotline. Do you have any opinion on using his approach for higher risk investing?



    Thanks for the continued good information.



    Ben
  4. John (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I've lost a good amount trying to get in at the bottom and out at the top. So instead of trying to make a bundle on a couple trades I am now trying to make a little on a lot .
  5. Christopher H (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    We need more articles like this! It helps us become more independent investors.
  6. Dylan (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    This is a test of the spam filter!
  7. Juan G (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    it's great. i just want to know why my broker qualified me for just covered calls and not the "option trading" per say that you guys talk about all the time. i here great things about it and i feel confident i can do option trading.i'm more than anxious to get started but i guess i could wait a bit longer and keep studying options for a while. Deep in the money is smart and safe either way by puts or calls. Not being at the mercy of time value before your stock does anything at all is wise. plus considering calender calls will bring down your cost of the option. Most investors i hear speak about option trading is just that. deep in the money. I consider my money very serious although I can't do options yet. i do feel i'm leaving a lot of money on the table and i hate that. do i need a diploma to do this or what?
  8. Wayne (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I think it would be helpful to specify a percentage in the money, or at least a general stock price level for the 5 point rule. Consider that the JAN 540 call for GOOG (Fri close $552.16)is in the money by $12.16, but that is only 2.2%. On the other hand, the deepest available call for TOA (Fri close $3.01) is JAN 2.50, which is only $0.51 in the money, but that is 16.9%, or almost 8 times deeper in the money than the GOOG call on a percentage basis. I am not recommending these either way, just picked them for the wide price difference.



    Wayne B
  9. KIERON (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Excellent ... Love it ... Always valuable to be reminded of the basics, so we continue to see the wood for the trees



    Keep it coming

    Kieron
  10. James R (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I have learned a great deal from reading the articles that you publish. I thank you. I am particularly interested in options trading. I save everything on the subject that you publish. I confess to being extremely ignorant about the subject and would like to know the definition of being "deep in the money". JRS

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