There are hundreds of option strategies. And they can be vastly different in terms of tactics and desired outcomes.
But in fact, there are really only a few basic strategies, and everything else is built on these in some form. This range of possible strategic designs is what makes the options market so interesting, challenging, profitable... and also nice and risky.
Are you surprised by my characterization of risk as "nice?"
Well, "risk" and "opportunity" are really the same thing, and every option trader needs to accept this.
Because if you want to go fast and get some serious movement, well, you have to climb on board the rollercoaster first, even if it scares you a little bit.
In my last options trading strategies article I took the mystery out of long calls, long puts, covered calls, short puts and insurance puts.
But the truth is those are only five of the eight general strategies (and "families" of strategies) we use here At Money Map Press.
Today I'd like to tell you about the final three, explaining what you need to know about LEAPS, spreads, straddles.
Let's get started with LEAPS.
Understanding LEAPS Options
This strategy can be an attractive alternative to the otherwise very short lifespan of most options. And the potential for gains in either long or short LEAPS trades is substantial.
LEAPs
Article Index
Options Trading Strategies: What You Need to Know About LEAPS, Spreads and Straddles
To continue reading, please click here...
Investing Strategies: How to Decode the New Options Trading Symbols
It sounds like it should have been a government project - "clarifying" something by changing it from just four or five letters to a lengthy combination of up to 22 letters and numbers. That is what's about to happen with the trading symbols for "put" and "call" options listed on U.S. options exchanges.
But the "government" had nothing to do with it.
The idea for a new option-quotation format was actually put forth back in 2005 by securities industry insiders whose companies were struggling to find ways to deal with the rapidly growing number of optionable stocks, index options, short-dated "serial" options, long-term issues such as LEAPs - and the expanding strike-price ranges for all of them.
With the guidance of the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC), a group was organized and tasked with creating what was subsequently dubbed the Options Symbology Initiative (OSI) - a system to "overhaul the symbology used in representing listed option contracts in data transmissions between market constituents."
But the "government" had nothing to do with it.
The idea for a new option-quotation format was actually put forth back in 2005 by securities industry insiders whose companies were struggling to find ways to deal with the rapidly growing number of optionable stocks, index options, short-dated "serial" options, long-term issues such as LEAPs - and the expanding strike-price ranges for all of them.
With the guidance of the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC), a group was organized and tasked with creating what was subsequently dubbed the Options Symbology Initiative (OSI) - a system to "overhaul the symbology used in representing listed option contracts in data transmissions between market constituents."