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Posted by Martin October 15, 2022
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2022 SPX put credit spreads trading review – week 41


We traded only two SPX trades last week and one SPY butterfly adjustment. That trade may end busted. Maybe, next week I will try to adjust that trade again to squeeze some credit from it, but as of today, the trade might be just a bust. I wanted to adjust that trade to a credit spread, but then the market reversed and started selling hard at the end of the week. I am glad I didn’t touch that trade, as the protection I put in may still be needed.
 

Our trades delivered a $265.00 gain. Our account weekly trading is up by 0.72% while SPX lost -1.55%.
 

Our SPX account is up +927.89% since the beginning of this program, and we have $41,215 in unrealized gains.

 

Initial SPX trade set ups

 

I dedicated a $3,600 initial amount that will be used to trade SPX PCS strategy per week. Today, the account is up at $37,003.95. However, due to the recent bear market, many trades are still tight to open trades which need to expire to release the funds.
 

Our SPX strategy is designed as directional options trading. We are selling credit put spreads to collect premiums, and hopefully, these spreads expire worthlessly, or we repurchase them for a small debit.

We use a set of indicators (primarily based on moving averages and volume profiles) and market sentiment that generates bullish signals. The trading is based on a “trend-following strategy.” We open the trade if we have a bullish signal and a bullish trend. If we do not have a signal, we stay away. We also trade credit call spreads when we have bearish signals. In a choppy market, we stay away from or trade very short expirations (usually 1 or 2 days or up to 7 days), but the trading is muted as we need a trending market. Unfortunately, today, we do not have a trending market (yes, overall, it is a down-trending market, but for short-term trades, it is choppy and not trending).
 

Here you can see all our trades:

 
SPX PCS account value
Click on the picture above to see the entire list.
 

Last week trading

 

Overall, the strategy resulted in a +927.89% gain last week.
 

Initial account value (since inception: 12/07/2021): $3,600.00
Last week beginning value: $36,738.95
Last week ending value: $37,003.95 (0.72%; total: +927.89%)
The highest capital requirements to trade this strategy: $19,995
Current capital at risk: -$12,215
Unrealized Gain: $41,215 (-337.41%)
Realized Gain: -$7,655 (62.67%)
Total Gain: $33,560 (-274.74%)
Win Ratio: 56%
Average Winner: $315
Average Loser: $512

 

SPX PCS account value
SPX PCS account value
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index net liq
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index
 

If you want to receive trade alerts whenever we open a new SPX put credit spread or a hedge trade, you can subscribe to our service:

 

 

Note, if you wish to subscribe to multiple levels, you can do so by subscribing to one level only and then sending us an email that you want to be added to other levels too.

Also, if you like this report, hit the like button so I know there is enough audience wanting to see this type of report. If you have any questions or want to see anything else about my SPX trading, do not hesitate to contact me or write a comment in the comments section. Thank you!

 
 




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Posted by Martin October 09, 2022
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2022 Week 40 investing and trading report


Last week when the market rallied my account recovered and it went from $52k to over $65k in a day. Then it crashed and I am pretty much back where I started. Because of this extreme volatility and bearishness out there, I didn’t do too much trading last week. But I was buying the SPXL fund as I think this is the right thing to do. When the market goes down, I am buying this 3x leveraged ETF, and once the market recovers, I will be trimming that position. And, on top of that, I am selling covered calls.
 

I still struggle with cash and buying power. It is difficult to stay afloat. Many times during this bear market, it was the options dragging my account down, now my stocks joined the party and drag the account down too.

 
Cash - Net-Liq - BP 40
 

I didn’t trade much last week, only one covered call. That trading delivered +$54.00 premiums last week ending October 2022 at +$54.00 (+0.10%) options income. Our net-liq value increased by 4.36% to $54,372.41 value. That is still a terrible result. Our overall account is now down -48.04% YTD.
 

Here is our investing and trading report:

 

Account Value: $54,372.41 +$2,369.84 +4.36%
Options trading results
Options Premiums Received: +$54.00    
01 January 2022 Options: +$8,885.00 +8.36%  
02 February 2022 Options: +$10,009.00 +10.34%  
03 March 2022 Options: -$1,662.00 -1.47%  
04 April 2022 Options: +$1,047.00 +1.19%  
05 May 2022 Options: +$8,604.00 +11.32%  
06 June 2022 Options: +$9,691.00 +13.73%  
07 July 2022 Options: +$8,717.00 +11.39%  
08 August 2022 Options: +$7,987.00 +12.15%  
09 September 2022 Options: +$2,997.00 +5.76%  
10 October 2022 Options: +$54.00 +0.10%  
Options Premiums YTD: $56,329.00 +103.60%  
Dividend income results
Dividends Received: $66.10    
01 January 2022 Dividends: $303.38    
02 February 2022 Dividends: $732.81    
03 March 2022 Dividends: $393.74    
04 April 2022 Dividends: $337.31    
05 May 2022 Dividends: $343.99    
06 June 2022 Dividends: $445.80    
07 July 2022 Dividends: $367.66    
08 August 2022 Dividends: $683.58    
09 September 2022 Dividends: $555.20    
10 October 2022 Dividends: $66.10    
Dividends YTD: $4,229.57    
Portfolio Equity
Portfolio Equity: $155,598.37 +$10,690.90 +7.38%
Portfolio metrics
Portfolio Yield: 6.26%    
Portfolio Dividend Growth: 11.94%    
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 10 yrs: $93,721.93 50.84%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 20 yrs: $5,173,549.98 2,806.32%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 25 yrs: $151,140,212.01 81,984.01%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 30 yrs: $18,002,931,729.22 9,765,452.92%  
Portfolio Alpha: 98.29%    
Sharpe Ratio: -14.49 BAD  
Portfolio Weighted Beta: 0.47    
CAGR: 267.19%    
AROC: 66.55%    
TROC: 2.22%    
Our 2022 Goal
2022 Dividend Goal: $4,800.00 88.12% In Progress
2022 Portfolio Value Goal: $151,638.03 35.86% In Progress
6-year Portfolio Value Goal: $175,000.00 31.07% In Progress
10-year Portfolio Value Goal: $1,000,000.00 5.44% In Progress

 

Dividend Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week we have received $66.10 in dividends bringing our October’s dividend income at $66.10.


Last week, we bought these dividend growth stocks:

 
– 2 shares of COST @ $490.46
 
I plan on accumulating Costco shares and this is my initial investment. I will be slowly adding more shares in the near future until I reach 100 shares.

 

Here is a chart of our account equity showing our accumulation goal and the value of all stocks in our account. It shows a nice upward-sloping chart as our equities grow. This is a result of our options trading and using premiums to buy dividend stocks:

 
Account Equity week 40
 

And here you can see the dividend income those equities pay us every year:

 
Annual Dividend Payout week 40

 

Growth stocks Investing and Trading Report

 


Last week, we bought the following growth stocks and funds:
 

  • 35 shares of SPXL @ $62.60
     
    I accumulated 200 shares of this ETF and started selling another covered call contract. I believe, accumulating this 3x leveraged ETF during this bear market is a great opportunity that will pay big in a recovery.

     

Options Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week I was not trading options much. I only opened one covered call against SPXL. The call was with Friday’s expiration and it expired for a full profit. Next week I will reopen the position.

That trade delivered a gain of +$54.00 making our October options income +$54.00.

 

We were actively trading our SPX strategy that delivered -$85.00 loss.


 

Expected Future Dividend Income

 
We received $66.10 in dividends last week. Our portfolio currently yields 6.26% at $54,372.41 market value.

 
Our projected annual dividend income in 10 years is $93,721.93, but that projection is if we do absolutely nothing and let our positions grow without adding new positions or reinvesting the dividends.

We are also set to receive a $6,676.00 annual dividend income ($556.33 monthly income). We are 7.12% of our 10 year goal of $93,721.93 dividend income.

 
Future Divi on YOC week 40
 

The chart above shows how our future dividend income is based on the future yield on cost and what dividend income we may expect. The expected dividend growth depends on what stocks we add to our portfolio and the stocks’ 3 years average dividend growth rate. It is interesting to see what passive income we may enjoy 10, 20, 25, or 30 years from now.

 

Market value of our holdings

 
Our non-adjusted stock holdings market value increased from $144,907.47 to $155,598.37 last week.

In 2022 we plan on accumulating dividend stocks, monetizing these positions, HFEA strategy, and SPX trading. We plan to raise more of our holdings to 100 shares to sell covered calls. We continued rebalancing our options trades that released buying power significantly. That allowed us to start repurchasing shares of our interest.

 
Stock holdings trading week 40
 

We aim to accumulate 100 shares of dividend growth stocks we like and then start selling covered calls or strangles around those positions. We also planned on reinvesting all dividends back into those holdings.
 

Investing and trading ROI

 

Our options trading delivered a +0.10% monthly ROI in October 2022, totaling a 103.60% ROI YTD. If our options income stays at this level by the end of the year, we will exceed our 45% annual revenue goal in selling options against dividend stocks.

Our entire account is still down -48.04%.
 

Our options trading averaged $5,632.90 per month this year. If this trend continues, we will make $67,594.80 trading options in 2022. As of today, we have made $56,329.00 trading options.
 

Old SPX trades repair

 

We traded our SPX put credit spread strategy which you will be able to review in my next report. The SPX strategy has held well so far, and our signals kept us from opening new aggressive trades.

 

Investing and trading report in charts

 

Account Net-Liq

 

TW Account trading Net-Liq week 40
 

Account Stocks holding

 
TW Account holdings week 40
 

Last week, S&P 500 grew 25.82% since we opened our portfolio while our portfolio grew 2.54%. On YTD basis, the S&P 500 fell -38.94% and our portfolio -27.23%. This is an excellent result! We are significantly outperforming the market.

The numbers above apply to our stock holdings only. Our overall account net-liq is down by -48.04% this year.
 

Stock holdings Growth YTD

 
TW Account holdings Growth YTD
 

Our stock holdings are starting to outperform the market. Hopefully, this trend will stay, and we will constantly do better than S&P 500.
 

Our 10-year goal is to grow this account to $1,000,000.00 value in ten years. We are in year two and we accomplished 5.44% of that goal.
 

Our 6-year goal is to reach $175,000 account value to be eligible for portfolio margin (PM) and today we accomplished 31.07% of that goal.
 

Our 2022 year goal is to grow this account to a $151,638.03 and today we accomplished 35.86% of this goal.

 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Monthly Income

 
TW Options Trading Income week 40
 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Annual Income

 

TW Options Annual Trading Income week 40
 

Our dividend goal and future dividends

 

TW Received vs Projected Dividends week 40
 

We plan to make $4,800.00 in dividend income in 2022. As of today, we received $4,229.57. This is in line with our projected dividend 2022 goal. We also accumulated enough shares to start making $6,676.00 a year. Our monthly projected dividend income is $556.33, and our current monthly dividend income is $352.46.
 

TW Received vs Future Dividends week 40

 

I have a favor to ask. If you like this report, please, hit the like like button button so I know that there is enough audience that like this content. Also, if there is something you want to know or you want me to change this report to a different format, let me know in the comments section.

 
 




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Posted by Martin October 09, 2022
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2022 SPX put credit spreads trading review – week 40


Last week SPX trading started well… and then it all puked again. This is definitely a very difficult time to trade. You can get whipsawed quickly or you adopt a strategy where you maintain the trades and adjust them to stay afloat and eventually a winner in the end. Some traders open a trade, usually a zero DTE one, and then place a stop loss. Unless you are a full-time trader and can watch the trade you will most likely lose money being stopped almost every time. How do you react to a trade when the market rallies in the morning and pukes in the afternoon? I adopted a strategy where I roll the trades no matter whether others like it or hate it. It is capital intensive, sometimes very frustrating, but doable.
 

I traded a little last week. I opened a trade that almost went bust. Fortunately, it expired a day before that market pooped again. Then I opened a debit trade (a butterfly, which I adjusted – I should have not touched it – and later adjusted it again).

These trades delivered a -$85.00 loss. It is not a loss, but debit I paid for the debit trades, so it still may change next week if these trades play out. Our account is down by -0.23% while SPX gained +1.51%.
 

Our SPX account is up +920.53% since the beginning of this program, and we have $36,738.95 in unrealized gains.

 

Initial SPX trade set ups

 

I dedicated a $3,600 initial amount that will be used to trade SPX PCS strategy per week. Today, the account is up at $36,738.95. However, due to the recent bear market, many trades are still tight to open trades which need to expire to release the funds.
 

Our SPX strategy is designed as directional options trading. We are selling credit put spreads to collect premiums, and hopefully, these spreads expire worthlessly, or we repurchase them for a small debit.

We use a set of indicators (primarily based on moving averages and volume profiles) and market sentiment that generates bullish signals. The trading is based on a “trend-following strategy.” We open the trade if we have a bullish signal and a bullish trend. If we do not have a signal, we stay away.

We set the set of rules and alerts and backtested them. The backtesting software proved that the strategy was viable and returned good gains. We also tried to automate the decision-making as much as possible to have the trading as mechanical as possible. This helps eliminate our emotions. The decision-making was reduced to: “bullish signal present” – open a trade, “not present” – stay away. It worked well.

Here you can see all our trades:

 
SPX PCS account value
Click on the picture above to see the entire list.
 

Last week trading

 

Overall, the strategy resulted in a +920.53% gain last week.
 

Initial account value (since inception: 12/07/2021): $3,600.00
Last week beginning value: $36,823.95
Last week ending value: $36,738.95 (-0.23%; total: +920.53%)
The highest capital requirements to trade this strategy: $19,995
Current capital at risk: -$12,215
Unrealized Gain: $41,215 (-337.41%)
Realized Gain: -$7,920 (64.84%)
Total Gain: $33,295 (-272.57%)
Win Ratio: 56%
Average Winner: $318
Average Loser: $512

 

SPX PCS account value
SPX PCS account value
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index net liq
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index
 

If you want to receive trade alerts whenever we open a new SPX put credit spread or a hedge trade, you can subscribe to our service:

 

 

Note, if you wish to subscribe to multiple levels, you can do so by subscribing to one level only and then sending us an email that you want to be added to other levels too.

Also, if you like this report, hit the like button so I know there is enough audience wanting to see this type of report. If you have any questions or want to see anything else about my SPX trading, do not hesitate to contact me or write a comment in the comments section. Thank you!

 
 




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Posted by Martin October 02, 2022
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2022 Week 38-39 investing and trading report


I feel like Cathy Woods now. Her ARKK fund lost over 60% this year. My portfolio is down 50%… That is bad for my trading and investing, isn’t it? My stocks are down 18.9% for the year. The rest are losses in options. Am I worried? No. The losses are just on paper as the options are either in the money or sport high implied volatility. This will change once the market improves. But it will take time to repair the damage. I hope I will be able to make money while doing it.
 

I now have more cash than the net-liquidating value of my portfolio. That is unimaginable…

 
Cash - Net-Liq - BP 39
 

Our trading delivered +$616.00 premiums last week ending September 2022 at +$2,997.00 (+5.76%) options income. Our net-liq value decreased by -23.48% in last two weeks to $52,002.57 value. That is a terrible result. Our overall account is now down -50.31% YTD.
 

Here is our investing and trading report:

 

Account Value: $52,002.57 -$12,208.62 -23.48%
Options trading results
Options Premiums Received: +$1,795.00    
01 January 2022 Options: +$8,885.00 +8.36%  
02 February 2022 Options: +$10,009.00 +10.34%  
03 March 2022 Options: -$1,662.00 -1.47%  
04 April 2022 Options: +$1,047.00 +1.19%  
05 May 2022 Options: +$8,604.00 +11.32%  
06 June 2022 Options: +$9,691.00 +13.73%  
07 July 2022 Options: +$8,717.00 +11.39%  
08 August 2022 Options: +$7,987.00 +12.15%  
09 September 2022 Options: +$2,997.00 +5.76%  
Options Premiums YTD: $56,275.00 +108.22%  
Dividend income results
Dividends Received: $368.50    
01 January 2022 Dividends: $303.38    
02 February 2022 Dividends: $732.81    
03 March 2022 Dividends: $393.74    
04 April 2022 Dividends: $337.31    
05 May 2022 Dividends: $343.99    
06 June 2022 Dividends: $445.80    
07 July 2022 Dividends: $367.66    
08 August 2022 Dividends: $683.58    
09 September 2022 Dividends: $555.20    
Dividends YTD: $4,163.47    
Portfolio Equity
Portfolio Equity: $144,907.47 -$20,771.11 -12.54%
Portfolio metrics
Portfolio Yield: 6.43%    
Portfolio Dividend Growth: 12.20%    
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 10 yrs: $98,406.63 55.56%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 20 yrs: $6,522,861.27 3,682.74%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 25 yrs: $229,246,444.67 129,430.22%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 30 yrs: $35,905,621,206.13 20,271,949.25%  
Portfolio Alpha: 102.71%    
Sharpe Ratio: -7.61 BAD  
Portfolio Weighted Beta: 0.50    
CAGR: 265.14%    
AROC: 69.16%    
TROC: 3.02%    
Our 2022 Goal
2022 Dividend Goal: $4,800.00 86.74% In Progress
2022 Portfolio Value Goal: $151,638.03 34.29% In Progress
6-year Portfolio Value Goal: $175,000.00 29.72% In Progress
10-year Portfolio Value Goal: $1,000,000.00 5.20% In Progress

 

Dividend Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week we have received $368.50 in dividends bringing our September’s dividend income at $555.20. That met my expectations.

Last week, we did not purchase any dividend stock.

 

Here is a chart of our account equity showing our accumulation goal and the value of all stocks in our account. It shows a nice upward-sloping chart as our equities grow. This is a result of our options trading and using premiums to buy dividend stocks:

 
Account Equity week 39
 

And here you can see the dividend income those equities pay us every year:

 
Annual Dividend Payout week 39

 

Growth stocks Investing and Trading Report

 

Last week, we purchased no growth stocks.

Options Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week I was just adjusting my existing options positions.

However, these adjustments delivered a gain of +$616.00 making our September options income +$2,997.00.

 

We were actively trading our SPX strategy that delivered $3,597.00 gain.


 

Expected Future Dividend Income

 
We received $368.50 in dividends last week. Our portfolio currently yields 6.43% at $52,002.57 market value.

 
Our projected annual dividend income in 10 years is $98,406.63, but that projection is if we do absolutely nothing and let our positions grow without adding new positions or reinvesting the dividends.

We are also set to receive a $6,548.80 annual dividend income ($545.73 monthly income). We are 6.65% of our 10 year goal of $98,406.63 dividend income.

 
Future Divi on YOC week 39
 

The chart above shows how our future dividend income is based on the future yield on cost and what dividend income we may expect. The expected dividend growth depends on what stocks we add to our portfolio and the stocks’ 3 years’ average dividend growth rate. It is interesting to see what passive income we may enjoy 10, 20, 25, or 30 years from now.

 

Market value of our holdings

 
Our non-adjusted stock holdings market value decreased from $165,678.58 to $144,907.47 last week.

In 2022 we plan on accumulating dividend stocks, monetizing these positions, HFEA strategy, and SPX trading. We plan to raise more of our holdings to 100 shares to sell covered calls. We continued rebalancing our options trades that released buying power significantly. That allowed us to start repurchasing shares of our interest.

 
Stock holdings trading week 39
 

We aim to accumulate 100 shares of dividend growth stocks we like and then start selling covered calls or strangles around those positions. We also planned on reinvesting all dividends back into those holdings.
 

Investing and trading ROI

 

Our options trading delivered a +5.76% monthly ROI in September 2022, totaling a 108.22% ROI YTD. If our options income stays at this level by the end of the year, we will exceed our 45% annual revenue goal in selling options against dividend stocks.

Our entire account is still down -50.31%.
 

Our options trading averaged $6,252.78 per month this year. If this trend continues, we will make $75,033.33 trading options in 2022. As of today, we have made $56,275.00 trading options.
 

Old SPX trades repair

 

We traded our SPX put credit spread strategy which you will be able to review in my next report. The SPX strategy has held well so far, and our signals kept us from opening new aggressive trades.

 

Investing and trading report in charts

 

Account Net-Liq

 

TW Account trading Net-Liq week 39
 

Account Stocks holding

 
TW Account holdings week 39
 

Last week, S&P 500 grew 23.95% since we opened our portfolio while our portfolio grew -0.12%. On YTD basis, the S&P 500 fell -40.81% and our portfolio -29.89%. This is an excellent result! We are significantly outperforming the market.

The numbers above apply to our stock holdings only. Our overall account net-liq is down by -50.31% this year.
 

Stock holdings Growth YTD

 
TW Account holdings Growth YTD
 

Our stock holdings are starting to outperform the market. Hopefully, this trend will stay, and we will constantly do better than S&P 500.
 

Our 10-year goal is to grow this account to $1,000,000.00 value in ten years. We are in year two and we accomplished 5.20% of that goal.
 

Our 6-year goal is to reach $175,000 account value to be eligible for portfolio margin (PM) and today we accomplished 29.72% of that goal.
 

Our 2022 year goal is to grow this account to a $151,638.03 and today we accomplished 34.29% of this goal.

 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Monthly Income

 
TW Options Trading Income week 39
 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Annual Income

 

TW Options Annual Trading Income week 39
 

Our dividend goal and future dividends

 

TW Received vs Projected Dividends week 39
 

We plan to make $4,800.00 in dividend income in 2022. As of today, we received $4,163.47. This is in line with our projected dividend 2022 goal. We also accumulated enough shares to start making $6,548.80 a year. Our monthly projected dividend income is $545.73, and our current monthly dividend income is $346.96.
 

TW Received vs Future Dividends week 39

 

I have a favor to ask. If you like this report, please, hit the like like button button so I know that there is enough audience that like this content. Also, if there is something you want to know or you want me to change this report to a different format, let me know in the comments section.

 
 




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Posted by Martin October 01, 2022
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2022 SPX put credit spreads trading review – week 38-39


I didn’t have much time to report a trading a week ago as I was traveling. Fortunately, I could manage the trades. When preparing today’s report on our SPX trading, I was surprised to see that I had made money. We delivered enough credit to eventually offset other trades. We will be working on that to reduce our trades. We have too many box trades now.
 

Our trades delivered a $3,597.00 gain last week. That brought our account up by +10.83% while SPX lost -7.43%.
 

Our SPX account is up +922.89% since the beginning of this program, and we have $36,823.95 in unrealized gains.

 

Initial SPX trade set ups

 

I dedicated a $3,600 initial amount that will be used to trade SPX PCS strategy per week. Today, the account is up at $36,823.95. However, due to the recent bear market, many trades are still tight to open trades which need to expire to release the funds.
 

Our SPX strategy is designed as directional options trading. We are selling credit put spreads to collect premiums, and hopefully, these spreads expire worthlessly, or we repurchase them for a small debit.

We use a set of indicators (primarily based on moving averages and volume profiles) and market sentiment that generates bullish signals. The trading is based on a “trend following strategy.” We open the trade if we have a bullish signal and a bullish trend. If we do not have a signal, we stay away.

We set the set of rules and alerts and backtested them. The backtesting software proved that the strategy was viable and returned good gains. We also tried to automate the decision-making as much as possible to have the trading as mechanical as possible. This helps eliminate our emotions. The decision-making was reduced to: “bullish signal present” – open a trade, “not present” – stay away. It worked well.

Here you can see all our trades:

 
SPX PCS account value
Click on the picture above to see the entire list.
 

Last week trading

 

Overall, the strategy resulted in a +922.89% gain last week.
 

Initial account value (since inception: 12/07/2021): $3,600.00
Last week beginning value: $33,226.95
Last week ending value: $36,823.95 (+10.83%; total: +922.89%)
The highest capital requirements to trade this strategy: $19,995
Current capital at risk: -$12,312
Unrealized Gain: $41,312 (-335.54%)
Realized Gain: -$8,102 (65.81%)
Total Gain: $33,210 (-269.74%)
Win Ratio: 56%
Average Winner: $324
Average Loser: $512

 

SPX PCS account value
SPX PCS account value
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index net liq
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index
 

If you want to receive trade alerts whenever we open a new SPX put credit spread or a hedge trade, you can subscribe to our service:

 

 

Note, if you wish to subscribe to multiple levels, you can do so by subscribing to one level only and then sending us an email that you want to be added to other levels too.

Also, if you like this report, hit the like button so I know there is enough audience wanting to see this type of report. If you have any questions or want to see anything else about my SPX trading, do not hesitate to contact me or write a comment in the comments section. Thank you!

 
 




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Posted by Martin October 01, 2022
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September 2022 $100 Challenge account review


The stock market is still in crash mode. For the entire of September, the market lost significantly, and our strategy was losing too. But I am not concerned. We are sitting tight and investing in stocks that will deliver nice dividends while waiting for recovery. This strategy is designed for a small account and today’s market is not suitable for small accounts, so we have to wait it out and wait for a better time to resume trading options. But as soon as the market improves, we will also resume trading. Until then, we are in accumulation mode only. Sometimes, it is a lot better strategy to just wait.
 

Accumulation phase

 
The account is underperforming our goal. We are investing in stocks of our interest and building equity positions first. After we build our equity, we will be wheeling the positions. If you are not patient and want to trade right now with a small account, you can get burned significantly. The margin requirements can shift sharply and hurt your account. Trust me. I struggle with it in my main account when the maintenance requirements change sharply overnight, and I am in trouble. But my main account is big enough to navigate this and stay afloat. Our Challenge account doesn’t have that power.
 

August 2022 Challenge account review

 

MONTH GOAL $$ ACTUAL $$
August 2021: $409.00 $397.71
September 2021: $512.00 $476.91
October 2021: $615.00 $632.37
November 2021: $718.00 $659.00
December 2021: $821.00 $802.08
January 2022: $924.00 $594.29
February 2022: $1,027.00 $283.87
March 2022: $1,130.00 $301.74
April 2022: $1,233.00 $350.56
May 2022: $1,336.00 $428.82
June 2022: $1,439.00 $459.70
July 2022: $1,542.00 $641.27
August 2022: $1,645.00 $653.32
September 2022: $1,748.00 $617.92

 

$100 Challenge account review

 
From the chart above, the red dot (line) indicates the current account value, compared to the blue line (plan). Our account is underperforming our goal. But I expect this to improve with the market. We will keep buying assets and monetize them once we accumulate enough shares.
 

August 2022 Overall Challenge account review

 
The chart below indicates our account value compared to the overall goal and plans to grow the $100 investment into a $75,000 portfolio. As of today, we are still at the beginning of our journey.

YEAR CONTRIBUTIONS $$ GOAL $$ ACTUAL $$
Year 0: $100.00 $100.00 $100.00
Year 1: $1,300.00 $1,336.00 $459.70
Year 2: $2,500.00 $3,016.96 $617.92
Year 3: $3,700.00 $5,303.07  
Year 4: $4,900.00 $8,412.17  
Year 5: $6,100.00 $12,640.55  
Year 6: $7,300.00 $18,391.15  
Year 7: $8,500.00 $26,211.96  
Year 8: $9,700.00 $36,848.27  
Year 9: $10,900.00 $51,313.64  
Year 10: $12,100.00 $70,986.56  

 

$100 Challenge account review goal

 

August 2022 Challenge account Income

 

Total Invested in Stocks $903.07
Total Unrealized Profit -$287.48
Total Realized Profit -$1.17
Strangles Income -$1,316.00
Dividends Income $32.84
Deposits Total $1700.00
Cash $4.57
Net-Liq $617.92

 

If you want to see what investments we take and what trades and strategies we will use to grow this small account, join our program today and grow your money. We engage in safe investments, select strategies to maximize winning trades, and grow our portfolio. And you can do it too, today! We do not provide quick rich promises, gambling, or reckless strategies. We want our portfolio to grow steadily and preserve our capital while maximizing returns.
 

As a member, you will have access to the following features:
 

 

 




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Posted by Martin September 18, 2022
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2022 Week 37 investing and trading report


Another bad week for our portfolio. It dropped 12% again last week. But as you will see below, it is just paper losses. I didn’t sell any of my positions and in fact, I bought a few more shares of stocks I want to accumulate. My equity grew higher despite the selloff. So what is pushing the portfolio down? Options. I have many open options positions and yes, most of them are bullish. I also have covered calls which should work in my favor. But they are not. Why? Volatility. The price of these options skyrocketed and the price increase couldn’t be offset by the time decay and delta. But when this bear market eases again, the price of these options collapse and my positions will skyrocket.
 

Last week my net-liq value, cash, and buying power were a mixed bag. Cash improved, the rest tanked:

 
Cash - Net-Liq - BP 37
 

Our trading delivered +$1,795.00 premiums last week ending September 2022 at +$2,381.00 (+3.71%) options income. Our net-liq value decreased by -12.63% last week to $64,211.19 value, which is worse than the August drawdown. Our overall account is down -38.64% YTD.
 

Here is our investing and trading report:

 

Account Value: $64,211.19 -$8,112.78 -12.63%
Options trading results
Options Premiums Received: +$1,795.00    
01 January 2022 Options: +$8,885.00 +8.36%  
02 February 2022 Options: +$10,009.00 +10.34%  
03 March 2022 Options: -$1,662.00 -1.47%  
04 April 2022 Options: +$1,047.00 +1.19%  
05 May 2022 Options: +$8,604.00 +11.32%  
06 June 2022 Options: +$9,691.00 +13.73%  
07 July 2022 Options: +$8,717.00 +11.39%  
08 August 2022 Options: +$7,987.00 +12.15%  
09 September 2022 Options: +$2,381.00 +3.71%  
Options Premiums YTD: $53,864.00 +74.48%  
Dividend income results
Dividends Received: $46.67    
01 January 2022 Dividends: $303.38    
02 February 2022 Dividends: $732.81    
03 March 2022 Dividends: $393.74    
04 April 2022 Dividends: $337.31    
05 May 2022 Dividends: $343.99    
06 June 2022 Dividends: $445.80    
07 July 2022 Dividends: $367.66    
08 August 2022 Dividends: $683.58    
09 September 2022 Dividends: $186.70    
Dividends YTD: $3,794.97    
Portfolio Equity
Portfolio Equity: $165,678.58 -$4,875.92 -2.86%
Portfolio metrics
Portfolio Yield: 5.67%    
Portfolio Dividend Growth: 11.61%    
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 10 yrs: $73,485.60 40.43%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 20 yrs: $2,805,442.84 1,543.41%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 25 yrs: $57,662,419.04 31,722.96%  
Ann. Div Income & YOC in 30 yrs: $4,145,973,452.62 2,280,906.23%  
Portfolio Alpha: 81.22%    
Sharpe Ratio: 7.72 EXCELLENT  
Portfolio Weighted Beta: 0.49    
CAGR: 293.70%    
AROC: 57.79%    
TROC: 10.78%    
Our 2022 Goal
2022 Dividend Goal: $4,800.00 79.06% In Progress
2022 Portfolio Value Goal: $151,638.03 42.35% In Progress
6-year Portfolio Value Goal: $175,000.00 36.69% In Progress
10-year Portfolio Value Goal: $1,000,000.00 6.42% In Progress

 

Dividend Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week we have received $46.67 in dividends bringing our September’s dividend income at $186.70. That met my expectations.

Last week, we did not purchase any dividend stock.

 

Here is a chart of our account equity showing our accumulation goal and the value of all stocks in our account. It shows a nice upward-sloping chart as our equities grow. This is a result of our options trading and using premiums to buy dividend stocks:

 
Account Equity week 37
 

And here you can see the dividend income those equities pay us every year:

 
Annual Dividend Payout week 37

 

Growth stocks Investing and Trading Report

 


Last week, we bought the following growth stocks and funds:
 

  • 5 shares of AMZN @ $136.01
     
    I plan on accumulating 100 shares of this stock. Currently, I am at 20 shares.

 

  • 9 shares of TMUS @ $140.14
     
    I plan on accumulating 100 shares of this stock. Currently, I am at 55 shares.
     

Options Investing and Trading Report

 
Last week I was just adjusting my existing options positions.

However, these adjustments delivered a gain of +$1,795.00 making our September options income +$2,381.00.

 

We were actively trading our SPX strategy that delivered $1,685.00 gain.


 

Expected Future Dividend Income

 
We received $46.67 in dividends last week. Our portfolio currently yields 5.67% at $64,211.19 market value.

 
Our projected annual dividend income in 10 years is $73,485.60, but that projection is if we do absolutely nothing and let our positions grow without adding new positions or reinvesting the dividends.

We are also set to receive a $6,686.70 annual dividend income ($557.22 monthly income). We are 9.10% of our 10 year goal of $73,485.60 dividend income.

 
Future Divi on YOC week 37
 

The chart above shows how our future dividend income is based on the future yield on cost and what dividend income we may expect. The expected dividend growth depends on what stocks we add to our portfolio and the stocks’ 3 years’ average dividend growth rate. It is interesting to see what passive income we may enjoy 10, 20, 25, or 30 years from now.

 

Market value of our holdings

 
Our non-adjusted stock holdings market value decreased from $170,554.50 to $165,678.58 last week.

In 2022 we plan on accumulating dividend stocks, monetizing these positions, HFEA strategy, and SPX trading. We plan to raise more of our holdings to 100 shares to sell covered calls. We continued rebalancing our options trades that released buying power significantly. That allowed us to start repurchasing shares of our interest.

 
Stock holdings trading week 37
 

We aim to accumulate 100 shares of dividend growth stocks we like and then start selling covered calls or strangles around those positions. We also planned on reinvesting all dividends back into those holdings.
 

Investing and trading ROI

 

Our options trading delivered a +3.71% monthly ROI in September 2022, totaling a 86.68% ROI YTD. If our options income stays at this level by the end of the year, we will exceed our 45% annual revenue goal in selling options against dividend stocks.

Our entire account is still down -38.64%.
 

Our options trading averaged $6,184.33 per month this year. If this trend continues, we will make $74,212.00 trading options in 2022. As of today, we have made $55,659.00 trading options.
 

Old SPX trades repair

 

We traded our SPX put credit spread strategy which you will be able to review in my next report. The SPX strategy has held well so far, and our signals kept us from opening new aggressive trades.

 

Investing and trading report in charts

 

Account Net-Liq

 

TW Account trading Net-Liq week 37
 

Account Stocks holding

 
TW Account holdings week 37
 

Last week, S&P 500 grew 33.90% since we opened our portfolio while our portfolio grew 14.50%. On YTD basis, the S&P 500 fell -30.87% and our portfolio -15.28%. This is an excellent result! We are significantly outperforming the market.

The numbers above apply to our stock holdings only. Our overall account net-liq is down by -38.64% this year.
 

Stock holdings Growth YTD

 
TW Account holdings Growth YTD
 

Our stock holdings are starting to outperform the market. Hopefully, this trend will stay, and we will constantly do better than S&P 500.
 

Our 10-year goal is to grow this account to $1,000,000.00 value in ten years. We are in year two and we accomplished 6.42% of that goal.
 

Our 6-year goal is to reach $175,000 account value to be eligible for portfolio margin (PM) and today we accomplished 36.69% of that goal.
 

Our 2022 year goal is to grow this account to a $151,638.03 and today we accomplished 42.35% of this goal.

 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Monthly Income

 
TW Options Trading Income week 37
 

Investing and Trading Report – Options Annual Income

 

TW Options Annual Trading Income week 37
 

Our dividend goal and future dividends

 

TW Received vs Projected Dividends week 37
 

We plan to make $4,800.00 in dividend income in 2022. As of today, we received $3,794.97. This is in line with our projected dividend 2022 goal. We also accumulated enough shares to start making $6,686.70 a year. Our monthly projected dividend income is $557.22, and our current monthly dividend income is $316.25.
 

TW Received vs Future Dividends week 37

 

I have a favor to ask. If you like this report, please, hit the like like button button so I know that there is enough audience that like this content. Also, if there is something you want to know or you want me to change this report to a different format, let me know in the comments section.

 
 




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Posted by Martin September 18, 2022
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2022 SPX put credit spreads trading review – week 37


Last week was brutal. SPX lost over 4.7% and many of our SPX trades that were bullish are underwater again. I reversed trading to credit call spreads instead and try to manage the open trades by rolling them away and waiting for a better opportunity to manage them. It will be a long process.
 

We rolled one box trade away (that delivered nice credit, hope we will manage to keep it in the end). We also traded CCS (credit call spread) spreads. Those trades delivered a $1,685.00 gain. That brought our account up by +5.34% while SPX lost -4.77%.
 

Our SPX account is up +822.97% since the beginning of this program, and we have $37,594 in unrealized gains.

 

Initial SPX trade set ups

 

For the SPX strategy, I dedicated a $3,600 initial amount that will be used to trade SPX PCS strategy per week. Today, the account is up at $33,226.95. However, due to the recent bear market, many trades are still tight to open trades which need to expire to release the funds.
 

WHAT WILL WE TRADE?    
DAY DTE TYPE
MONDAY 7 DTE & 40 delta 10 wide Put Credit Spread
TUESDAY 30 DTE & 40 delta 10 wide Put Credit Spread
WEDNESDAY 7 DTE & 40 delta 10 wide Put Credit Spread
FRIDAY 60 DTE & 14 delta 10 wide Put Credit Spread
EVERY MONTH 120 DTE Put Debit Spread – HEDGE

 

Our SPX strategy is designed as directional options trading. We are selling credit put spreads to collect premiums, and hopefully, these spreads expire worthlessly, or we repurchase them for a small debit.

We use a set of indicators (primarily based on moving averages and volume profiles) and market sentiment that generates bullish signals. The trading is based on a “trend following strategy.” We open the trade if we have a bullish signal and a bullish trend. If we do not have a signal, we stay away.

We set the set of rules and alerts and backtested them. The backtesting software proved that the strategy was viable and returned good gains. We also tried to automate the decision-making as much as possible to have the trading as mechanical as possible. This helps eliminate our emotions. The decision-making was reduced to: “bullish signal present” – open a trade, “not present” – stay away. It worked well.

Here you can see all our trades:

 
SPX PCS account value
Click on the picture above to see the entire list.
 

We do not trade 0 DTE trades although we may shorten the DTE if needed. This strategy is designed to be as passive as possible. You open a trade and let it run. You do not need to be glued to the computer all the time. The strategy takes advantage of the market’s historical behavior of mainly going up. Yes, there will be selloffs and corrections, even bear markets, but over time, it goes up. And therefore, our strategy is designed for this direction. The premise is that if we have a bullish trend, we open a bullish spread and let it run. 80% or 90% of the time, it will be a winning trade. And if the trend is strong, we open more aggressive trades (which is not the case today due to the market’s correction).

How much money can you trade?

As you can see in the table below, the highest amount of cash to trade this strategy is $19,995.00. That will allow adjustments, rolls, and comfortable trading without blowing your account. Can you trade less? Well, yes, I started with a $3,600 initial amount. But you need to be selective. You won’t trade all trades. You just trade the safest trades only (which is the Friday trade), especially in this market, and when the market gets out of this mess, you can start adding trades. And you do not compound. You must wait for the actual trade to end before opening a new trade. This way, the growth will be a lot slower, and you collect less credit, but you do not blow your account, mainly when you need to roll. You do not have money to do that (as the old busted trade will need more buying power which can be reduced by adding an offsetting trade that neutralizes the old trade, but you still will need that initial buying power).

 

Last week trading

 

Overall, the strategy resulted in a +822.97% gain last week.
 

Initial account value (since inception: 12/07/2021): $3,600.00
Last week beginning value: $31,541.95
Last week ending value: $33,226.95 (+5.34%; total: +822.97%)
The highest capital requirements to trade this strategy: $19,995
Current capital at risk: -$4,594
Unrealized Gain: $37,594 (-818.33%)
Realized Gain: -$7,073 (153.96%)
Total Gain: $30,521 (-664.37%)
Win Ratio: 55%
Average Winner: $325
Average Loser: $496

 

SPX PCS account value
SPX PCS account value
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index net liq
 

SPX PCS account vs SPX
SPX PCS account vs SPX index
 

If you want to receive trade alerts whenever we open a new SPX put credit spread or a hedge trade, you can subscribe to our service:

 

 

Note, if you wish to subscribe to multiple levels, you can do so by subscribing to one level only and then sending us an email that you want to be added to other levels too.

Also, if you like this report, hit the like button so I know there is enough audience wanting to see this type of report. If you have any questions or want to see anything else about my SPX trading, do not hesitate to contact me or write a comment in the comments section. Thank you!

 
 




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Posted by Martin September 14, 2022
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Markets puked yesterday, what’s next?


The adage says that past performance is not a guarantee of future results or something like that. But the markets still follow certain patterns that tend to repeat. It is because the markets express human behavior and psychology. Even the algos that react to the events express the humans. Only much faster. They, too, are programmed by humans to do what humans would do.

Yesterday, we saw a big fall. The markets fell over 4%, which doesn’t happen every day. And if we accept that the markets do trade in certain patterns, we can look into markets’ seasonality from the past to see what may happen next. It is not guaranteed to happen, but it may give a clue of what the market participants may do next based on what the past market participants did before us.

 
markets in almanac
 

According to history, we may see positive trading after the 4% decline. S&P 500 has declined 4% or more in a single day 53 times before yesterday since 1950. The next trading day S&P was higher 35 times and lower 18. The average gain of 1.08% occurred on all up days. Based on historical performance, the odds of a gain today are 66.04%.
 
 




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Posted by Martin September 13, 2022
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Markets puked, should you buy tech stocks?


The markets overreacted to a 0.1% inflation miss and sold off by 4.41% (S&P500, the NASDAQ was even worse: -5.67%). Should we be worried? Will the markets continue down? And is this a good opportunity to buy non-dividend stocks? I like to buy dividend stocks because I get paid while waiting for the stock price appreciation. But what will you get with a stock that doesn’t pay dividends? If you bought a stock like Netflix (NFLX), Snowflake (SNOW), or PayPal (PYPL) when they were trading at their highest valuations and didn’t sell before they slid, you are sitting on significant losses, and it may take years to recover. And what if you buy now and the stock goes even lower? What do you get?
 

Will the markets continue selling?

 
That’s a good question. I would say yes. The selling gained very strong momentum. In the morning, it was selling down 2%, but the selling got stronger by the end of the trading session. See the chart below. As the price volume indicates, the most volume occurred at 3,980. We then sold off to as low as 3,927, which corresponds with the previous week’s POC. We bounced there. But will it be enough?

 
markets crashing after CPI
 

We also stopped at the previous lower upward sloping trend line:

 
markets at the support
 

I doubt this support will hold, at least not soon. Today’s investors are primarily idiots, and they freak out about something that was widely known, widely expected, and trumpeted to the world before. So we may see some more selling. We may see a bounce, too, before more selling. Technically, this is damage that will take time to repair.

But it is mostly the weak hands selling. The smart guys are buying because this situation will not last long. It may persist another year when the markets will be depressed, but that’s it. The bear markets do not last forever. The longest bear takes up to three years, and then it goes higher again.

And even if we go to the “difficult” or “lost decade” type of market, if you invest strategically, you will do well too.
 

Should you be buying non dividend stocks in these whacky markets?

 
This brings a question of how you should invest in the markets like this. You should not be selling, that is for sure. Today, many young inexperienced investors are used to investing for a quick buck. They want to buy high-flying meme stocks, ideally using options, make thousands, if not millions, and get out. It may have worked in 2020 and 2021, but today, they are getting slammed. But you should be doing the exact opposite.

 
millennials out of the markets
 

Buying dividend stocks is a no-brainer. In the markets like today, the stock price gets slammed when everyone panics, but you do not care because you still get paid. Every three months or even monthly, you get paid your dividends. But what about non-dividend stocks like Google (GOOGL), PayPal (PYPL), Netflix (NFLX), T-mobile (TMUS), and many others? They are very good quality stocks. They are just getting slammed because everyone thinks they are no longer alive (yes, the funeral service is this Saturday).

I still think this is the best time to buy these stocks. Even if they are not on the bottom, it is still a good time to add a few shares today. Then wait a few weeks or months and add again.
 

What happens if you do so?
 

1) The stock stays where it is for many months or years. Or they may never recover to their previous highs (like Netflix going back to $700 a share). Well, then use the position as a cash-generating vehicle. Sell covered calls every month against that position and collect your dividends. If you keep doing this for the next 30 years, you will generate income that can be reinvested or spent.

2) The stock starts recovering and moving back to its previous highs. Then use the position as your cash-generating vehicle and sell covered calls and puts (strangle). Puts will help you roll the calls should the stock move too fast. Make sure you have enough cash to cover the puts in case the stock tanks and you get assigned.
 

I always use this strategy, which helps me generate up to $10,000 cash every month. Sometimes, it is hard to manage the position in volatile markets, sometimes, I cannot take the cash out as the open margin requirements collateralize it, but in the end, it pays off. And it is easy to do. All you need to do is to learn how to do it, gain confidence and execute the plan. But mainly, do not panic during markets like this one. Do the exact opposite of what everybody does. In the end, you will be the winner.

 




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