Advanced Real World Options Strategies by Tony Saliba & Joe Corona
When you complete Tony’s course, you will be in possession of Tony’s best strategies and methodologies including: How to attempt to take advantage of today’s market conditions, including capitalizing on volatile declining stocks, as well as capitalizing on potentially explosive runaway stocks.
Tony Saliba’s favorite options strategies to trade breakouts, wedges, cup-with-handles and other powerful market setups.
Great news for technology stock traders! Do you think tech stocks are now dead money? Not necessarily for workshop attendees! Tony will teach you his sophisticated strategies to attempt to “suck premium” as these stocks trade sideways and build their bases. While the rest of the world is waiting for these lifeless stocks to recover, you will be able to pinpoint and execute opportunities — week after week. This information alone may be worth the price of admission!
Tony and his team’s powerful “Expiration Week” options strategies which give you up to 5:1 risk/reward ratios.
Tony’s 5 favorite strategies to attempt to increase the probability of your trade being profitable and increase your leverage, while at the same time potentially decreasing your risk.
How to combine overbought and oversold indicators with options open interest to attempt to identify explosive moves. Plus, some of the strategies to use with this combination.
Exploiting “Strike Price Drift.” You will learn how to identify this phenomenon, plus be shown the number one strategy they uses to attempt to take advantage of these opportunities when they occur.
Plus many other strategies Tony and his team of traders use, many of which have not been made public before.
And that’s not all Tony and his head traders will teach you. They will also share with you their:
Favorite high-volatility market strategies to attempt to prosper from today’s market.
Construction of options to potentially maximize returns while minimizing risk. (Of course, options always involve risk).
Multiple ways to turn losing stock positions into winners through advanced options techniques, plus…
Time-frame strategies, advanced spread strategies, applying butterflies to rapidly moving stocks, and many other dynamic methods!
Learn about Option (finance):
In finance, an option is a contract which gives the buyer (the owner or holder of the option) the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset or instrument at a specified strike price prior to or on a specified date, depending on the form of the option. The strike price may be set by reference to the spot price (market price) of the underlying security or commodity on the day an option is taken out, or it may be fixed at a discount or at a premium. The seller has the corresponding obligation to fulfill the transaction – to sell or buy – if the buyer (owner) “exercises” the option. An option that conveys to the owner the right to buy at a specific price is referred to as a call; an option that conveys the right of the owner to sell at a specific price is referred to as a put. Both are commonly traded, but the call option is more frequently discussed.
The seller may grant an option to a buyer as part of another transaction, such as a share issue or as part of an employee incentive scheme, otherwise a buyer would pay a premium to the seller for the option. A call option would normally be exercised only when the strike price is below the market value of the underlying asset, while a put option would normally be exercised only when the strike price is above the market value. When an option is exercised, the cost to the buyer of the asset acquired is the strike price plus the premium, if any. When the option expiration date passes without the option being exercised, the option expires and the buyer would forfeit the premium to the seller. In any case, the premium is income to the seller, and normally a capital loss to the buyer.
The owner of an option may on-sell the option to a third party in a secondary market, in either an over-the-counter transaction or on an options exchange, depending on the option. The market price of an American-style option normally closely follows that of the underlying stock being the difference between the market price of the stock and the strike price of the option. The actual market price of the option may vary depending on a number of factors, such as a significant option holder may need to sell the option as the expiry date is approaching and does not have the financial resources to exercise the option, or a buyer in the market is trying to amass a large option holding. The ownership of an option does not generally entitle the holder to any rights associated with the underlying asset, such as voting rights or any income from the underlying asset, such as a dividend.
Take Advanced Real World Options Strategies by Tony Saliba & Joe Corona at Whatstudy.com
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Course Features
- Lectures 0
- Quizzes 0
- Duration Lifetime access
- Skill level All levels
- Students 189
- Assessments Yes