Showing posts with label NASDAQ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NASDAQ. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Making Money on Put Strategies

As I mentioned before in a previous post, some very successful traders use put strategies to make a lot of money in the market.  This was a very lucrative time for many traders who do.  The market was going up and people didn't know where it was going to stop.  Then instability came into the market through Cyprus, Greece and now with the attacks in Boston.  You can almost guarantee something is going to happen in a two-month time period to cause markets to destabilize and when they do the S&P, DOW and NASDAQ all go down.  The best play of course is the SPY because it responds directly to big dips in the market.  The options are also real close between the Bid and Ask price so this makes it easier to get in and out of your trade.

The market always goes up slowly and comes down fast.  You will almost never catch the market going up fast unless it is on some news that nobody but insiders know and when it does it is usually in after hours trading so you missed the run (case in point: Sprint shot up a whole point over night the other day after Dish Network said it wanted to buy them).  So the play is to wait for the market to go up and then place put options at various points going at the most two months out.  For example the market is already down today so I would wait until SPY gets back to 157 and then as it goes up place put options for the June 155 strike price.  Then wait and see what happens.  You can place your stop at 159 and your limit at around 153 (I know the options order window in TOS doesn't show the strike price but after you play around with adjusting your trade price it will show you on the chart where your options orders are).  

Yes it's great to have stop and limit orders but always watch your trades.  There are sometimes your bid doesn't go through as quickly as you would like and you could miss some profits or worse lose money.  When you see your profit margin approaching it may be a good thing to call your broker and ask him/her to place the trade for you at your trade price.  Depending on the brokerage firm they can actually execute your trade for you better than your computer.  They can find a buyer for you and make you some good money.  I've had good experiences with Trade King and highly recommend them.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Avoid the Pitfalls and Market Maker Tricks

After listening to several radio interviews of a few traders who used to work on Wall Street, I have a better understanding of the market and important pitfalls to avoid.  It is important to know that there are a lot of sharks in the water waiting for inexperienced an emotional traders to make irrational and quick decisions.  However, that does not mean that you can’t make any money in the market.  The opposite is true.  You can make a good living trading in the markets, you just have to be smart and know how and what to trade.  

One key piece of information I just learned from a guy who used to be on the NASDAQ was that market makers (the guy at your brokerage house) will watch people’s trades and look to see where most people place there stop loss price and some unscrupulous guys will move the price just beyond the point to where the majority of stop loss orders are and trigger the stop loss so they can take their commission.  For the trader who’s gone golfing and not watching his trade, he will lose money plus the commission he paid to the market maker.  

This just underlines the point that you can’t trade blindly and not watch your trades.  You also have be patient and wait for the proper setups so you don’t get caught waiting on the market to move.  The best way to engage this current market is to be either long term buying high yield dividend stocks or very short term, trading the market swings for only a day or so.  

There's another thing you have to watch out for as well and that's the penny stock sharks.  These guys will put messages all over the place about a particular stock that trades below one dollar.  They will talk about how this is the best stock of the year and it is going to go sky high.  However, they don't have any information that lets you know why.  What about this stock is so great that it is going to be the hot stock of the year?  The problem is that you can't get detailed information on many of these stocks because company data is harder to come by for penny stocks.  So just use common sense in these situations.  If someone tried to sell you something saying that it is the best thing in the world, but didn't have any information on the product, would you buy it?  I think not.