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Posted by Martin November 24, 2023
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Markets digesting Thanksgiving turkey


Today, the markets closed early after the Thanksgiving holiday. It was a slow moving (non-moving) day perfect for Iron Condors. Today, we will see how shoppers will deal with the Black Friday deals and how it impacts the markets in the coming weeks.

The markets didn’t move much and we are seeing the momentum slowing. That can be a concern. The trend is still firmly bullish but the markets are overbought and the momentum is losing steam:

 
markets
 

This can change in the coming weeks depending on how the markets react to Black Friday shopping. Retailers are signalling their worries over consumers’ spending. They are expecting lower sales this season but they were worried many times in the past too and their worries never materialized. Though, this can be different this holidays. Student loans repayments kick in and consumers may have less cash on hand to spend.

The next question is how would Wall Street react? If spending this holidays comes hot, will they freak out over fears that the FED may keep interest rates high to curb spending more, or will they cheer great and resilient economy (and consumer)? If it comes back down and disappointing, will the Wall Street see it as good news that the FED may start cutting the rates or will they freak out that the economy is crumbling (and recession coming)? Pick your side.

Nevertheless, this calm holiday time was great for our Iron Condor. We had SPX 4510/4500 puts and 4605/4615 calls which expired worthless for the full profit delivering 3.43% return in 2 days (101.93% annualized return).

I expect the next week, at least early days next week, to be still slow. We have another trade (Iron Condor) we opened on Wednesday and today, before the market closed, we opened another Iron Condor, both with Monday’s expiration. I think, as the markets stay calm on Monday and maybe Tuesday, that these trades will also expire worthless.

This is good for our Crumbs trading. So far we opened 41 trades and we only had 3 losers, that is 93% win ratio. I like this strategy!

 




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Posted by Martin November 22, 2023
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How to start trading options


On social media like Facebook, Reddit, or Twitter, I keep finding this question all the time: “How to start trading options.” And it can be intimidating to start trading options if you are new to them. Where to start? What to do? Recently, I found a question from one Redditor saying that he read a book telling him to “find an edge – a discrepancy between theoretical value (model) and price,” then “enter a position and leave when the edge is gone.” And then you have Greeks, which to follow? How to use them? How do we calculate them?

 

Can you see what is wrong with it?

 

Everything! None of it matters. It is all useless. The Redditor who asked the question was approaching options with the wrong mindset. Remember this: never, ever approach options as if they were stocks. Options are not an equity; they are not anything tangible you own, and they have no value to buy. They do not represent the business or capital. They are just a contract. Dream. They are dreams and promises. One dude says, “I have something, and I will sell it to you if you are interested. If XYZ happens in the future, what deal? oh, by the way, if I hold this deal for you, you will pay me a small fee, agreed?” That is an option. Just a deal. A contract that people can buy or sell.

So, if options are just a dream, what do you do with dreams? What do you do with dreams and promises? Remember, you sell dreams to people. You do not want to be the sucker buying dreams. You sell dreams. And that is your edge.

I have seen this again and again out there. People buying options then brag about thousands of percent of the profit they made and then boom, they blow their entire account in a few months. Just go to Wallstreetbets on Reddit. That subreddit is full of suckers buying options. They all think options are like a stock. They buy it and then expect the price to go up so they can sell and grab the huge profit… But the option doesn’t do what they expected, and they lose everything. They then learn about Greeks, predictions, edges, and magical prophecies and wonder how they can use them to their advantage.

 
Here is how you start trading options.

 

1. Always sell options

 

That’s it. Do not argue with it. You never buy options, only sell them. You buy options only as a hedge, protection, or a part of a complex option strategy but never as an income-producing vehicle.

 

2. Use options as a tool to buy or sell a stock

 

Although you do not have to use options to sell or buy a stock, you still want to look at them as if you wanted it. Remember, options are just a contract. You do not sell an option for the sake of the option itself but as if you wanted to buy the stock (or sell it). This has huge implications for everything else. So even if you are not interested in owning or selling the stock, remember, you are entering into a contract that says so.

 

3. Have enough capital to trade options

 

As I said above, selling options is a contract promising or accepting conditions of the contract, and therefore, you need to have resources to fulfill the contract’s obligations. If you do not have the resources, you will get burned. Burned. It is like going to buy a house or car, signing a bill of sale, and then realizing you do not have money. It will be considered a fraud. In many states, you will probably prosecuted or sued by the other party. With options, there will be no legal consequences except wiping out your account and ending up owning money to yourself, your family, and maybe even to the broker (if you screw up).

So, when selling options, make sure you have enough capital to meet your obligations should they occur. If you are selling puts, have enough money to buy the stock. If you are selling a call, make sure you own the stock. Once you become an experienced trader, you can start trading “naked” (without enough capital or underlying stock), but as a novice, forget going naked (if you have the urge to sell naked, feel free to undress in front of your computer and trade nude, but forget about it when trading options).

 

4. Trade options against stock you are OK to own

 

You can trade high flying stocks once you are experienced but if you are just starting you want to trade slowly and you want stocks that will not burn you the first day of your trading. It is great (and it feels great) to trade Tesla (TSLA) but that stock can turn around on a dime and it can wipe you out. Pick stocks that provide decent premium and if the stock goes against you, and you will be required to buy 100 shares of the stock, you will be OK with it. Rememeber, you are selling a contract and as a seller, you will have obligations. And if you sell puts, your obligation will be to buy 100 shares of the stock; if you sell calls, your obligation will be to sell your stock. If you trade a contract against a stock you never wanted to own, or do not have money to own it, DON’T!!

The best way to start is to pick a stock you like (I personally love using dividend stocks for this purpose) and sell a put against it. If the trade goes against you, you buy 100 shares and you are OK with it. You hold the stock and sell calls. This is a wheel strategy. It is easy and simple and it gives you confidence in trading options. After “wheeling” your stock, you gain enough experience and confidence to trade other stocks.

 

5. Don’t be greedy!

 

This is important. Never sell options for the sake of the premiums you can collect. This the same mistake people make with investing in dividend stocks. They buy dividend stocks because of the huge dividend yield but then they get burned badly when the company cuts the dividend or the stock price goes down like a rock. Options can do the same thing to you. Do not go after huge premiums. I know it feels good to be collecting $200, $300, or even $1000 in premiums every week or every day. I know the feeling. I am guilty of this myself.

But, this also depends on whether you actually want to buy (or sell) the stock. If you want to buy the stock, then go closer to the money (see later) and collect a larger premium, but if you are interested in generating income, then don’t do it. Go as far away as possible.

 

Ok, here is a sample of trading options:

 

Before I show you my selection process, here is a summary of the above notes:
 

  • always sell options
  • alway use options as a tool (contract) to buy or sell stocks
  • always trade against stocks that you are OK to buy or sell
  • always have enough capital or underlying stock (wheel it)
  • don’t be greedy

 

Pick a stock

 

Create a list of stocks you want to trade. Choose stocks that are in the range of $30 – $100 a share. Pick stocks you are OK to own. Use dividend stocks in case you end up buying them and sitting on them for some time. During that time, they will pay you dividends. Once you have the list, go through them and start looking for premiums and buying power requirements.

Here is my list for stocks I want to use for trading “crumb puts“:

 
trading options - list
 

These are a bit expensive stocks, so at the beginning you may choose cheaper stocks. The next column shows my desired strikes for “Crumb” trading. The last column shows an approximate buying power needed to sell the put option against that stock. This is a buying power in a margin account. In the cash account, you will need the entire amount equal to 100 shares (remember, you are selling a contract promising that you would purchase 100 shares of the stock).

But even if you have the stock, it still may not be the right one:

 
trading options - selecting strikes
 

So if you want generating income, you want to go far away from the money. I strive to select a strike that is 20% (or near it) below the current price. The trade below has a 96% probability of profit. How likely will this stock fall 20% in 37 days? Although it may happen during panic selling, it still is not going to happen in one day, so you will have time to get out before it happens. If you want to buy 100 shares of AMZN, you can go closer to the current price.

 
trading options - selecting strikes
 

But as I said before, this stock has a relatively large buying power requirements, that means, you have to have that money to sell the put. But you also need to have more money than that. If the stock starts slipping lower, the buying power requirement will go up too (if the stock reaches your strike, the requirement can quadruple or increase five times, so instead of $1,200, you will need $4,000 or $5,000 to cover this trade). If you do not have the money, do not trade this stock.

 
trading options - selecting strikes
 

Here is your buying power requirements and potential gain and loss:

 
trading options - selecting strikes
 

The maximum loss can be scary, but as I mentioned, that will happen only if the stock goes to zero. It is the same as if you bought 100 shares of Amazon (AMZN) at $146 a share (spent $14,600 total capital) and the stock dropped to zero. Your loss will be $14,600 a share. With this trade example, you would be buying 100 shares of AMZN at $125 a share, so your loss would be $12,500 (minus the premium) if the stock goes to zero. So, risk-wise, it is the same no matter if you buy a stock and it goers to zero or sell a put and the stock goes to zero (unless you manage to buy it back before it goes to zero).

With this options trading, I do not need to know anything about Greeks, edges, biases, technical analysis, predictions, or anything. All I need to know is my probability of this trade and trade it again and again. And with this trade, my probability of profit is 96%. The buyer’s probability of this exact trade is just 4%.

I was not trading like this before because I was greedy. I didn’t consider $26 premium large enough to bother. So I went closer to the money, collected $300+ in premiums and got burned. The stock dropped and I kept carrying around a busted trade tieng money in a helpless trade.

Today, I look at it from a different perspective. I consider the premium I collect to be a dividend. If I manage to collect $26 premium every month, that will be $78 in premium every quarter, or $312 annual income. That is as if Amazon was paying me $3.12 annual dividend. That is 2.13% yield. Not bad for a stock that doesn’t pay dividends.

To get this income, I only need to use about $1,200 of my capital without buying 100 shares of the stock. So my yield is technically 26%… And with 94% probability of collecting this money every month without worrying about assignments, I will take it every time.
 

Trading options can be intimidating and it may appear complicated and overwhelming, but it is actually very simple and easy. Just try it in a paper account first, using the rules above, and once you know the ropes, start using your real money. Create your money making machine.

 




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Posted by Martin November 22, 2023
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Stock market’s unimpressive move up on tech stocks boost


The market moved up on tech stocks boost. But it was a quite unimpressive move. We jumped in the morning on Microsoft’s upper hand over OpenAI circus hiring Sam Altman back and now negotiating his return back as a ChatGPT CEO. NVDA reported earnings and crushed it again, but surprisingly, the stock went down ($487.38 -12.02 -2.41%); I bet many Wall Street Bets gamblers who were loading on calls are now scrambling why did it happen. Well, NVDA said something about China. China is not good, NVDA is down… Wall Street only sees a few inches beyond their own tip of their noses. So don’t be surprised. We got tech stocks boost but apparently not as big boost as one would expect. But this unimpressive move played well to our trading.

 
tech stocks boost
 

We had a trade – an SPX Iron Condor – expiring today (4,460/4,470/4,625/4,635) and it is now well out of the money. Our protection was at -1.56% and +1.85% but the market moved +0.38% since opening this trade. It will expire for a full profit providing 3.43% gain in 2 days (102.91% annualized return).

This morning I opened two new Iron Condors (you can subscribe for alerts here) as I expect this sideways calm move for the rest of the week which will play well with these trades. Tomorrow, the markets will be closed and on Friday it will trade only until 1 pm ET so our trade set to expire on Friday will not have much time to go against us. I expect it to be a winner too.

 




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Posted by Martin November 21, 2023
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Markets down supposedly waiting for NVDA


Media are spinning their narratives telling us what they think (usually after the fact) what is going on. And now they tell us that the markets are down because of investors waiting for Nvidia (NVDA) earnings report after the bell. If it was true, that would make the market extremely stupid. They are selling now, to be buying after the bell today or tomorrow morning should NVDA report good results. Will they?

 
NVDA
 

But the spinning continues. We are also down because of the FOMC meeting minutes we are about to be enlightened with soon. And the bad retail sails indicating that the consumer is spending less. But other articles, and usually on the same network, tell us that Americans are spending like crazy when their savings rate dropped to 3.9% from 8.9% average. And then we have Black Friday coming. If that turns strong, rally will continue. If weak, Wall Street will freak out that a recession is coming.

Why am I even saying this? Because, there will be always something to worry about. Something Wall Street will freak out about, media telling us that this was it, the sky started falling and permabears who were usually wrong for decades will come out of their holes predicting another doom and gloom. And when they will be right with their predictions (once every ten years), they will be elevated by CNBC as the ones who “correctly predicted the market crash” and they will be paraded around for months.

So, this time, it is NVDA being blamed for today’s “sell off” (note, market down 0.41% is not a selloff), tomorrow, it will be something else. Ignore it. Have your plan in place and follow it diligently. Even though the market is overbought and the momentum is losing steam. It doesn’t matter.

 




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Posted by Martin November 20, 2023
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SPX broke up from a very short consolidation


Last week the market broke up from, what I think, was a very short consolidation pattern. After the big rally sparked by a better-than-expected CPI report last week, the markets stalled and traded sideways for a few days. This happened right under the major resistance at 4,525. So, the question appeared, was this going to hold or were we doomed and headed to bouncing down again? I bet, many bears who were predicting doom and gloom all year long were wishing for a crash. But today, the markets broke above that consolidation and spiked higher. Unfortunately, the consolidation was not very strong so the subsequent rally may not be very strong either (the longer the market stays in a particular pattern, the more meaningful it becomes). Moreover, we are probably going to see the end of the year rally (Santa Claus rally).

 
SPX consolidation
 

This trend helped our trades. Last Friday, we placed a new “Crumbs Iron Condor” with today’s expiration. We had 4,465/4,470 puts and 4,580/4,585 calls and we collected 0.30 ($30) credit. This trade provided 102% annualized return as it expired worthless for a full profit.

We also rolled some older SPX call spreads into put spreads in expectation of an end of the year rally.

We think the markets will continue going higher as inflation will be easing more, and FED will start cutting the rates. I recommend stop listening to all the talking heads and doom and gloom predictors predicting their end of the world. They were predicting the market crash since 2009 and they were 99% wrong. And they will always be wrong.

Tomorrow, we will get the FED’s FOMC meeting notes that will come under scrutiny from investors seeking a clue whether there would be any hint of rate cuts next year. I think, it is foolish but short-sighted Wall Street does that. I think we will not see anything different from what we already know. The FED would probably stay a bit hawkish and the markets may shrug it off and continue higher. If they see a hint of rate cuts, expect the market to blast off. We are also heading to a short week due to the Thanksgiving Day, so on Thursday, the markets will be closed and on Friday the markets will close early (at 1 pm ET). This is typically a quiet week and markets tend to drift higher.

 




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Posted by Martin November 19, 2023
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September – October 2023 SPX put credit spreads trading review


I was busy with many things last two months to report our SPX trading and today I am going to report both months I missed – our SPX trading in September and October 2023. Many things happened during these two months. I switched trading strategy once again as the previous ones didn’t work well to my taste. I switched to trading broken wing butterflies. But I was not happy with it. So, I turned into what I call SPX Crumbs trades. So far, the trading worked perfectly. Out of 36 trades, I only had 3 losing trades and we collected $1,229.28 in premiums.

 

Our SPX account is up +1,332.05% since the beginning of this program.

 

Initial SPX trade set ups

 

I dedicated a $3,600 initial amount that will be used to trade SPX PCS (Crumbs) strategy per week. Today, the account is up at $51,553.82.
 

Our SPX Crumbs strategy is designed as neutral options trading. We select our strikes far away from the market, so they are more than 2 SD (standard deviation) away. The premiums are smaller, but the chance of profit is 99%. Even during last week’s rally (due to better-than-expected CPI report) when the markets rallied more than 2.4% in a single day, our trades remained safe.

 

Here you can see our 2023 Crumbs trades:

 

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

Last month trading

 

Overall, the strategy resulted in a +1,332.05% gain last month.
 

Initial account value (since inception: 12/07/2021): $3,600.00
Last month beginning value: $49,376.95
Last month ending value: $51,553.82 (+1.55%; total: +1,332.05%)
The highest capital requirements to trade this strategy: $7,151.63
Current capital at risk: $3,151.63
Unrealized Gain: $77.63
Realized Gain: $709.58
Total Gain: $1,229.28
Win Ratio: 99.99%
Average Winner: N/A
Average Loser: N/A

 

SPX PCS account value
SPX PCS account value
 

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

SPX PCS account vs SPX performance
SPX PCS account vs SPX performance
 

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 that if you wish to subscribe to multiple levels, you can only subscribe to one level and send us an email that you want to be added to other levels.

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 comment in the comments section. Thank you!

 
 




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Posted by Martin November 17, 2023
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Indexes flat after a strong rally helped our trades


After the October CPI report, the markets saw a strong rally, which helped our struggling puts but hurt our calls. We opened a few Iron Condors a few weeks ago, and when the market rallied, we rolled those calls into puts. But soon after we did that, the markets sold off again, and the puts got in the money. It took three to four weeks to get out of the mess.

But last week, we received an October CPI report, after which the markets had a strong rally again. That saved our puts. Unfortunately, I also opened a few call spreads, and the rally was too strong. I feared I would have to roll those calls into puts again, staying in trades I wanted to finish.

Months of heavy selling was undone in three weeks. It was a crazy move! In the last two weeks alone, the markets rallied almost 7%! That is a typical annual return of the SPX… done in two weeks! After the CPI report, the market jumped 2.4% only that day!

But, in the last two days, the markets stalled and remained flat, which helped our trades. All these trades expired worthless, but it was close! We had a 4510/4525 call spread, which expired yesterday. The market finished at 4,508.24 that day. Today, we had another call spread with 4,560/4,565 strikes. I feared that if the market resumed the craziness, I would have another “hot” trade.

Fortunately, the markets stayed flat after the strong rally, but what does it mean now? Is it just a consolidation of the gains or are the bulls exhausted, and this is just a calm before the storm? If you look at the chart, the markets just reached the resistance, and it is prone to collapsing. Maybe. We have to wait and see. We may have Santa’s rally for the rest of the year.

 




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Posted by Martin November 13, 2023
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Options Portfolio Management


When buying stocks in a cash account, you can go all in and be fully invested. But when you are buying stocks on margin and, on top of that, trading unsecured options, proper options portfolio management is a must.

I learned my lesson the hard way when, during the raging bull market, I invested everything in stocks and sold naked strangles. Then, the market turned bearish, and I was sweating to keep it afloat. And it cost me a lot of money!

Portfolio management doesn’t have to be complex. It is simple. What is difficult is the self-discipline to follow the rules.

When trading options, you will need a margin account (unless you plan to trade only basic strategies such as covered calls and cash-secured puts). And margin will throw a wrench into investors’ simplistic thinking. It all suddenly becomes complex and scary.

If you decide to trade SPX trades with us (subscribe) or on your own, you will need a set of rules to follow, such as allocation, positioning, cash management, and scaling the trades.

Here are the rules I set up for our portfolio (though I must admit, in 2021 mania, I too became reckless, and I am still cleaning up the mess):
 

Options Portfolio Management – Cash allocation

 

Cash allocation in portfolio management was my most significant issue. I hated to keep cash in a brokerage account, earning nothing. This drove my urge to be fully invested, although I knew it was wrong.

The rule is to keep 30% of the entire portfolio in cash but invest in a cash equivalent ETF. Some brokers, such as Fidelity, offer suitable money market ETFs that earn a good interest (currently up to 4.25%, not much, but better than nothing). Others don’t provide anything, and the cash makes zero return.

In this case, I use short-term bond ETFs such as ICSH and SGOV. They hold value during turbulent times and pay a decent yield.

 

Options Portfolio Management – Options position sizing

 

No matter how much money you have in your account, set a realistic position sizing. If we keep 30% of our portfolio in cash, then put 20% of your portfolio for options trading.

If 20% appears to be too large for you and you feel scared to deploy it, then go smaller. You can always scale up later.

Once you have the amount set, determine the trades you would trade. I decided to sell one Iron Condor contract with 2 DTE and $5 wide spread, one Iron Condor contract with 7 DTE and $5 wide spread, and one Iron Condor contract with 30 DTE and $5 wide spread.

That means over a month-long period, I trade 13 trades and risk no more than $1,500 on any given day or week. And I keep trading these positions again and again. I open new trades only when the old ones expire (or if I have to roll them, then after they finish, too). Do not scale the trades!

 

Options Portfolio Management – Scaling up

 

Do not scale trades up! At least not initially. Keep trading the same trades repeatedly, and do not use proceeds from your previous trades to open more trades! This is a common mistake and a trap everyone can easily fall into. Look at it this way: you trade Iron Condors, and you are successful in 9 trades, but the 10th trade can wipe out those trades if something goes wrong. And if you scale your trades up, you can wipe out not only the previous nine trades but your entire portfolio.

Instead, use your proceeds to buy other investments.

When can you scale up? Once all your allocations are met, then you can scale up.

 

Options Portfolio Management – Equity Allocation

 

Start building your portfolio base by buying good companies. Use proceeds from the options to buy stocks. Do not gamble with these stocks. Do not buy penny stocks or high-flying growth stocks. This should be your base, not a roller coaster. Since you will purchase these equities in a margin account, stock market fluctuations will still give you a headache, even with these lazy, good-quality stocks. But if you blow your options trading, you will not blow your entire account!

I blew my account many times, and this strategy saved my account often. After I wiped out cash for options trading, I still had enough equity in good-quality stocks.

I keep 50% of my account in dividend-paying stocks as my base.

 

Options Portfolio Management – Summary

 

To summarize these rules, this is what I do in my accounts:
 

  • Build and keep 30% in cash equivalents such as ICSH or SGOV ETFs. When the markets rallied, I added more cash to stay at 30% or buy long-term equities. When the markets crash, I start selling ICSH or SGOV to release cash and buying power to avoid margin calls.
  • Build 50% of the portfolio in long-term, good-quality stocks. I prefer dividend stock, so they also generate cash. I never sell these positions unless I must satisfy margin requirements. But once the margin requirements are satisfied, I immediately buy these positions back.

  • Use 20% of the portfolio for options trading. I do not necessarily use it all, but start small and add slowly.

  • Use proceeds from options trading to buy cash ETFs and dividend stocks.

  • Scale your options trading up only when your other allocations are met. You have 30% in cash, 50% in equity, and more cash on hand. Then, slowly add more trades.

  • Scaling up options trades could be widening the spreads (for example, going from a $5 to $10 spread) or adding more contracts. If you are unsure and not ready to scale up, keep unused funds in cash. For example, I “save” all unused funds and proceeds from options trading in the ICSH fund, while I save 30% cash in the SGOV fund.
     

Following these rules will save you a lot of headaches when the markets crash or go into a bear market. You will also have enough cash on hand to buy stocks if a great opportunity arises (and lately, there was a lot of opportunity, but I was out of money).

 




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Posted by Martin November 12, 2023
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Apply force on the market and it will distort


When you try to force on the market any agenda you may have, the market will react. And usually not the way you want. We have seen this in 2020 when politicians decided to shut the markets and the entire economies down. They distorted not only the markets but the entire economies.

People get this wrong. They think that everything we are experiencing with the stock market results from a lousy economy due to too much money in the system. It is true, but partially. The primary reason is elsewhere. The primary cause is the abrupt stop of the world economy. The rest are consequences, like a domino.

First, they stopped the markets. Then, they had to pour trillions into the markets to save them. The pendulum was pushed toward one side. Because of the trillions in the system, people went on a spending spree. That raised inflation. Did it hurt businesses? No, companies made trillions in profits! Everyone was happy, and everyone was spending like crazy.

Inflation was rising, and politicians and FED got worried. But even during high inflation, people kept spending like crazy. Airports were full. Vacation destinations were booked months ahead. Some restaurants were booked weeks ahead (check Texas Roadhouse, for example). And politicians were worried, so they swung the pendulum in the opposite direction. And to the other extreme. Now, we have high inflation and the risk of halting the economy once again.

But the markets will react and resist the force. The question is how and which direction it will resist.

And the recent force on the markets we saw was EV. During the hype, everyone was about electric cars. Tesla was going to the moon. California applied another force on the market, approving a bill to go full electric by 2030 (or so).

The pendulum was moved to another extreme. Today, the EV pushers are surprised that no one is buying electric cars. Tesla is forced to lower prices, narrowing its margin beyond sustainability. GM just announced suspending manufacturing of EVs whatsoever, and Ford is following suit.

I do not say that there is no market for the EVs. There is. But we are not ready for it. The electric grid is not prepared for it. The charging system across the country is not ready. And customers are not prepared to pay horrendous money for overpriced cars. We need to grow to it naturally and not by the dictate of politicians (Communists tried this in their central economies and failed miserably).

Apply force on the market, which will do the opposite of what you wish for.

 




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Posted by Martin November 07, 2023
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Expanding the Crumbs strategy to regular stocks


Two months ago I started trading the Crumbs strategy against SPX spreads. The strategy is to move short strikes so low that the trade will be very safe and a likelihood of getting busted is lowered to a very minimum. This type of trading has 97% to 98% probability of profit. Only a black swan event would go and bust it. And today I decided to expand this trading to regular stocks and trade naked puts.

 
Crumbs strategy
Source: Pixabay
 
Trading naked puts with Crumbs strategy is safe. Relatively. It increases the POP to almost 100% (99% to be exact). The premium is very low. I will collect $21 bucks premium ($19.87 after commissions and fees) but it is almost a sure profit. Unfortunately, the capital requirements are a lot higher than with spread. Traders may consider this not worth it.

Today, I opened a new trade against Amazon (AMZN). I sold a December put contract with 115 strike price and collected $21 premium. The capital requirements or buying power is $1,150 and a total risk is $11,500.00 (that is in case the stock goes to zero). So you may think that this is not worth it – risking 12 grand to make 21 bucks? Go figure!

Well unless you can repeat this over and over every month with peace of mind sleeping well every night knowing that your trades will most likely expire worthless for a full profit. Of course, if you want a thrill and excitement of being in a roller coaster, raise your strikes up and collect $200 of the premium (or sell at the money puts). But be prepared that you may get assigned if the trade goes against you.

This strategy is to generate income, not to buy the underlying stock. If I want to buy the underlying, I would go closer to the money to collect nice and juicy premium and buy the stock for a better price. But I consider this strategy to generate income and not interested in owning the stock and in this case, I want it to expire every month worthless.

 




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