If you are trading large numbers of contracts:
NEVER LET AN OPTIONS TRADE GO TO EXPIRATION
Let me say that again NEVER LET AN OPTIONS TRADE GO TO
EXPIRATION
I don’t care if you are up and you can make more money if
you let them expire. It’s not worth the
risk especially if you are trying to make more money by overleveraging your
trade.
Let’s say you sold 10 contracts on AAPL and bought 10 for a
put spread. Your high strike was 114 and
your low was 110. Your thinking the most
I can lose is $4,000 because of the spread.
WRONG
When you get close to expiration the 110 contracts go down
to zero value and there are no bids out there for you to close your trade if
you really need to.
Once your insurance
trade has gone to zero you are essentially in a naked put and you are at the
mercy of the market for whatever happens.
If your 114 contracts become “In the Money” you are now on
the hook for $114,000 with no way of exiting the trade. You can’t sell or roll over to the next week
because there are no bids out there for your 110 contracts.
SO I REITERATE… If you don’t have the margin to cover the trade
NEVER LET AN OPTIONS TRADE GO TO EXPIRATION
• M&M Tata Steel: Government imposes anti-dumping duty on flat steel products from China and European Union countries.
ReplyDelete• Claris Life sciences: RBI hikes Claris Lifesciences FPI investment limit to 49 percent; NRI limit at 24 percent.
Share Market Company