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Trading Reality

I was talking to a salesman yesterday about trading options.  I don’t know what he was selling or how he got my number, but I realized something interesting while we were talking.  He asked me how I pick trades.  I could only murmur something vague.  There are a few things that I know about how I like to trade.  One is that I don’t believe in any predictions.  Are we still in a trading range?  Has the market started a new leg up since it closed above 930? Are we in for a sharp drop?

I don’t know.

I like to think as far forward as options expiration, next one is 20th June.   What is my best guess of what might happen until then and how can I make a few profitable trades.

I deeply respect people who can buy GE now and wait patiently for the economy to improve and GE to clean up its balance sheet and grow all its businesses.  I can’t do it.

My last boss at Millennium used to talk to floor brokers all the time and ask them, Why is the market up?  Why is it down?  The stories they told him satisfied him.  “Soros has split a large order among five brokers and it is getting executed …”  Something like that.

Trading shows how well aligned I am with reality.  I like models and finding and testing a trading strategy.  But all trading strategies bother me.  What is left out?  What are the hidden factors that are really driving the profit in the strategy?

In an up or sideways  market, you can do really well selling puts.   It is simple, and with a little technical analysis and no news to move the stock, like earnings, you can get some comfort that the put will expire worthless.  Also, you can use an options calculator to calculate the probability of success  based on the historical volatility.   That is comforting too.

In a down market selling puts will kill you.  So you have to know the difference short term, until the next expiration.

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Posted in Trading Mistakes.

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