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albany37  
#61 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 6:20:10 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Hi Karen,

I hope the golf was good wherever you went.  No use travling if you can't get a few rounds in .

As for the interest rate in the calculator, that is automatically pulled in by the tool when I input a stock symbol and click on "Go."  Nothing magic done by me.

While it's nice to have "best" lists as souces of ideas, I will always independently determine the suitability of any suggested option for my purposes and strategies.  Selling in the money options has its advantages although that's definitely a secondary consideration for me. 

Keep in mind when you sell an in the money option that you get more premium when the call is sold, but you lost some of that if the strike price is hit and the stock is called away from you.  It goes like this for XYZ stock: Strike price of $40, current and your buy price of $42.  Fatter call premium yes since the call is $2 ITM, but you lose $2 when your XYZ calls are exercised at $40 a share.  There's no such thing as a free lunch .

I'm please you're getting some value out of the workshop so far and I hope all other readers are doing the same.

Next set of postings will be going up in about 10 minutes.

Saul...

albany37  
#62 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 6:23:51 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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The Long Put Option

 

I said in my last posting that we’d move on from there to a discussion of two technical analysis tools that I and many others use in option trading.  We’ll do just that as soon as I finish up this and the following segment on puts.  

 

Owning a put, meaning you are long the put option, gives you the right, but not the obligation to sell 100 shares of the underlying for each option contract you own at the strike price before the option expires.  A long put gives its holder downside protection or profits with limited risk.  In fact, the only risk a put holder has is loss of the option premium paid when the put was acquired.

 

The strategy behind buying a put is straightforward.  You believe that the stock or underlying will decrease in value below the strike price by more than the premium paid before the option expires.  By analogy to owning a call option, that means you have to be correct on both the minimum decrease in the value of the underlying and the time in which the strike price level and below can be achieved.

 

Let’s look at an example based on yesterday’s close.  I think that FDS is overpriced at its Friday close of $37.79.   I am concerned that diminishing volume in the markets will put great pressure on brokerages and financial firms and that they will cut services, such as those provided by FDS in an attempt to shed expenses.  By the way, my use of FDS or any other stocks, as examples in this workshop, is for educational purposes only and is not a recommendation to buy, hold or sell these stocks. 

 

As noted, FDS closed at $37.79 yesterday and I think it is likely to go lower.  If I short the stock, I have considerable risk if the share price suddenly increases, for example if another company makes a tender offer at a significant jump over current levels to $50 a share or FDS makes a surprise announcement of a high, unexpected earnings increase.  A leap in share price to $50 would cost me more than $1200 not counting costs if I bought back the shares at the tender price or at the level reached after the overnight earnings announcement.  On the other hand, if I bought a put, my total risk is the cost of the put premium and nothing more permitting me to patiently wait until expiration for the stock to tank as I’ve predicted (my humility knows no bounds). 

 

As with call options, I like to submit limit orders and I am quite content to miss an opportunity, even if the difference is only a couple of cents, rather than buy an inflated put.  Again as with calls, I almost never buy or sell put options at the market.  Further, I don’t trade any type of option in the first hour or so after the open.  Things have not settled down much before 10:30 a.m., pricing is spotty and it’s likely you’ll do better later in the trading day when a consensus on the market is agreed on by traders.  If you think about it, this also means I don’t use good-til-cancelled option orders because I don’t want to be filled during the first hour or so, the so-called “amateur hour,”  after the open.  

 

The April 35 FDS put carries a $2.50 premium or $250 per contract.  That means I won’t profit on this option unless the stock drops below $32.50.  I’d be paying $250 plus costs for this put.  I think my chances are better if I buy more time, but the June premium for a 35 FDS put is $4.40.  If I was really convinced that FDS was likely to tank by the June expiration date, this would be my put option of choice to buy.  I think the balance between cost and additional time for my expectations to work out is worth the $1.90 premium difference.

 

Another use for a put is to buy insurance for downside protection when a stock is purchased.  I’ve never done this, but I know lots of folks who do this to limit risk.  This is known as a “married put,” a situation in which the put option is married to the underlying stock.  An investor who uses the married put strategy wants to own the underlying stock and protect his investment in that stock while limiting negative results.  Such an investor will usually buy sufficient put contracts to equal the number of 100 share lots owned.  Keep in mind that it’s nice to have the downside protection, but a married put, like normal insurance, isn’t free.  It’s your choice, your money and your degree of risk aversion at stake, but having something like a married put available is, pun intended, a nice option to have.

 

In the case of FDS I’ve completed a stock study in order to form my basis for buying the put I’ve described if I think that’s the appropriate strategy.  I also use other strategies, like technical analysis, to help me make option decisions. 

 

Next, selling put options.

 

Saul…

albany37  
#63 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 6:27:18 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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The Short Put Option

 

As it turns out, I rarely buy put options because my option trading is predicated on the receipt of premium revenue and not paying to acquire options whether they are of the call or put variety. As a consequence, I use put options almost exclusively to acquire desirable but overpriced stocks.  The nice part is that when I’m wrong and the stock doesn’t fall or even increases in price, sometimes irrationally so, I get to keep a good sized premium and am free to look for another like opportunities.

 

Buying puts in this manner creates a naked put, sometimes called an uncovered put.  This strategy is employed by investors who want to accumulate a position in the underlying stock, but only if the price is low enough, meaning it drops back into the buy range of a stock study or meets the buying requirement of another analysis approach.  The beauty of this overall put strategy is that when the investor fails to buy the shares, meaning the price didn’t fall far enough, he then gets to keep the put option premium as a bonus.

 

One such opportunity for me involved Garmin.  From the middle of 2005 to near the end of 2007, I did well by selling puts on GRMN on multiple occasions.  I was selling these puts because I was convinced throughout this entire period, primarily by my stock studies, that GRMN was continually overpriced.  So, my strategy at several points during the entire upward surge in GRMN share price was to sell puts, collect the premium and wait to buy the stock if it was ever put to me at what I thought was a more acceptable and lower price than what GRMN was selling for at the time. 

 

Remember all those stocks you put on a watch list because they looked really good in a stock study, but their price was too high for purchase.  Well, instead of just putting them in a list that was only looked at the night before a club meeting, you could sell puts on what you consider to be the best of those watch list stocks and collect the premiums or end up buying the stocks at a discount to then current prices. 

 

The major risk in selling puts or covered calls is that of a quick and significant drop in share price of the underlying.  Protect yourself as much as possible by not selling puts or covered calls before significant news, like earnings, is to be announced.  Further, both strategies are best suited for up-trending markets.  This means, of course, that you actually have to watch the stocks on your watch list.  What a novel idea.

 

“What’s the downside here” asks the most conservative and cautious member of your investment club when you propose this strategy?  Well that’s easy to figure out when the stock is put to your club or yourself and you pay for it only to see it continue to go down.  You have two choices if this happens.  One, hang in there and let your stock study prove itself or, two, close the position. 

 

In my GRMN story above, the price did continue to drop after the stock was put to me on two occasions.  Once, I held tight and was rewarded when GRMN came roaring back.  In this instance, my stock study convinced me this was the likely outcome.  The second time GRMN dropped after a put was exercised, I closed out the position for a small loss (whatever my limit was at the time) and jumped into another trade where I sold more options.  In this case, my stock study was still positive, but didn’t look as good as it did in the prior instance so I did wait until my mental stop loss was hit and then beat a hasty retreat by closing out the position, that is, by selling the stock with some comfort provided by the put premium I kept.

 

Well, with a covered call, I can protect myself by owning at least the same number of 100 share lots of the underlying as the number of call contracts I sell.  Now you ask, “Is there an equivalent to a covered call when I sell puts?”  The answer is sort of a no and yes situation and here’s what happens.

 

A broker’s requirements when you buy or sell options usually depends on your experience level with options and your net worth as determined by a questionnaire you fill out when opening a new account or qualifying an existing account for option trading.  If you’re just starting out in options, you’ll probably be at Level 1.  If you have several years of experience, probably at least five or so, you will probably get Level 5 approval.

 

When you sell a naked put as a Level 1 trader, brokers demand that you have enough cash or equity in your account, while the put you sold is open, to cover the cost of the trade should the put be exercised.  This is called a cash secured put.  In other words, you’re covered, if you think of it this way, by the cash.  In other words, you don’t have to scramble to come up with the cash to pay for stock when the put you sold is exercised.

 

If you are a Level 5 option trader, you are usually required by formula to put up about 25% of the cash value need for exercise, a significantly lower amount than the 100% required of a Level 1 option trader.  This lets you tie up less money if you’re so inclined.  I prefer to keep the entire 100% in my option account because it’s more convenient for me and I don’t have to get involved in transferring funds between different accounts.  In a few instances, I have had less than 100% cash in my account for short periods, so it is nice to have this choice.

 

I do have one huge caveat should you decide to sell put options.  NEVER, absolutely NEVER, sell more put options than the number of 100 share lots you customarily buy.  If you normally buy 100 or 300 shares of a stock, then do not sell more than 1 or 3 put options.  Don’t lose track of how many put options or buying obligations you have outstanding so you know at all times how much cash you’ll need if all those put options are exercised.  In other words, you may get a large negative surprise you cannot afford to handle, although as a legally enforceable obligation, you will have to.  I like to ladder my put options when I can so that the likelihood of having to acquire a large dose of stocks in a fairly short period is minimized.

 

When you sell put options, learn to be nimble and aware of market trends.  You don’t have to be fanatical about this and one or two tools to track the market are usually sufficient, but this is not a no-brainer, autopilot strategy.  On the other hand, it is fun, it is profitable and it is conservative (to my way of thinking) because it’s based on a rigorous stock study that tells you that a stock is worthwhile although currently overpriced instead of just a “gut feel.” 

 

Since I’m buying stocks in my option account, no long term outlook here, when a put I sell is exercised, I compound my premium collection strategy by selling covered calls once the shares put to me are in my account, assuming my now updated stock study is positive.  If the shares are called away from me, I usually collect the call premium and a small increase in share price.

 

If you think you’d like to try this strategy out, I suggest you paper trade this overall approach for a few months and see how it goes for you.  In fact, I believe that option newcomers should paper trade any option trading approach they take so they can get acclimated to options, their nomenclature and the mechanisms of trading options online.

 

Nest, we’ll take that promised look at some technical analysis tools, namely, Bollinger Bands and RSI.

 

Enjoy your weekend.

 

Saul…

albany37  
#64 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 6:28:52 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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The Collar

 

Okay, so I lied a little.  I previously said that I wasn’t going to cover any exotic options (defined for our purposes as a trade having more than two option legs), but I think on reflection that you should know a little about the option strategy known as a collar as it may be useful to you even if you don’t want to play in the option sandbox on a regular basis. 

 

As you will recall, in the discussion on covered calls, I noted that the greatest risk in a covered call is the situation where the underlying stock takes a significant drop.  Well, some option traders who are content to limit their profits a little more than in a covered call position, establish that position and also buy a protective put so they also have downside protection.  For that reason, the collar is also known as the protected buy-write (buy the stock and write or sell the call, often done simultaneously). 

 

In certain cases, the trader can even enjoy a “riskless” trade or a trade close to that, which sounds great, but limits upside potential in the underlying in exchange for downside protection.  The potential returns from a collar aren’t likely to make you “Trader of the Year” although slow and steady ain’t bad as the hare learned from the tortoise. 

 

Finally, a collar can also be used in the situation where you already own a stock on which you have enjoyed an excellent return (not too many positions like this around in the current market although it’s possible), but for which you fear a possibly significant price drop.  Let’s say you want to hold the stock longer (1) for tax purposes (push the sale into next year), (2) because you think the stock will drop to form another base before going even higher, (3) you want to establish a covered call position and are willing to pay for downside protection or (4) there’s a big event on the horizon (like buying a house) and you want to hold the position until it’s nearly time for closing on the new home.  In any of these cases, you can simply hold on to the stock or write the covered call without establishing a collar, but if you’re wrong and the stock heads south and stays there, you’ll wish you had out a collar in place.

 

Conceptually, the collar isn’t difficult to understand.  Let’s say you already own a 300 shares of Factset Research, which closed yesterday at $37.79.  For any of the above reasons, you want to establish a collar that will protect you for three months (longer if it’s for tax purposes).  Here’s how it would work.   

 

The June 40 call premium for FDS closed on March 13th at $3.10 per contract.  Assume you own or will buy FDS at the above closing price, you can sell three calls and take in $930 less costs.  You can then buy three June 30 puts (I’ll be covering puts shortly) at a per contract premium cost of $2.80 or a total of $840.  Your net result on selling the calls and buying the puts nets you $90. 

 

In summary, you can profit on a rise in share price of FDS up to $40 per share and have protection against loss once FDS gets to $30 a share.  If FDS does drop below $30, you absorb the loss between current price ($37.79) and the put strike price ($30).

 

At expiration, if the stock stayed below 40, the calls expire worthless and you keep the stock and the call premium. If the stock price rose above 40, your 300 shares of FDS will be called and the puts will expire worthless.  You get paid $12,000 for your FDS stock and keep the call premiums. 

 

If FDS drops no further than to 30 at expiration, the calls expire worthless as will the puts.  However, if your worst fears are realized and FDS drops below 25, your put options will rise dramatically in value, sufficiently to offset the difference in share price between 30 and what the price at expiration will be, thereby saving you $5 or more per share.  In other words, you’ll be able to sell your FDS stock no matter what price it drops to before expiration.  You become a self-insurer for the drop in price from $37.79 to 30, less the net premium of $90 you received.

 

You may ask why I didn’t buy a higher strike price put to protect myself further.  Well, it’s that old factor of cost and the tradeoff between risk and reward.  The FDS June 35 put premium is $4.40 per contract.  Buying these puts instead of the June 30 puts will cost $390 or $1.30 per share more than the premium revenue from the call option, meaning your protection doesn’t effectively kick in at 35, but instead will only protect you from $$33.70 a share on down.  This is due to the net cost of the option premiums when buying a put having a higher premium cost.

 

Note that in either case, for the example collars, you have established a zone of protection with a top and bottom limit.  The collar, as previously noted, is primarily a defensive strategy although it is used by some option traders as a profit motivated, low risk option trading strategy using LEAPS (Long-term Equity AnticiPation Securities) on underlying stocks that have high volatility.  I have never been tempted to try the LEAPS implemented version of the collar.  By the way, LEAPS (also to be covered at a later point in the workshop) are long range options that expire more than a year away. 

 

I don’t often use collars because I am not overly concerned with downside protection based on my selection criteria for writing covered calls and a collar gives up revenue due to the cost of protective puts.  However, given what has happened in the market over the past year or so, I will admit to holding a couple of positions for which a collar would have been wonderful to have in place . 

 

I’ve only received a few questions so far and I suspect that at least a few of you have questions you may still be reluctant to ask.  Please don’t be shy, ask away because others may have the same questions and are probably shyer than you are .  School is taking its spring break for me next week so I’ll have a little bit of extra time, when I can break away from grading mid-terms, to answer your questions.  Now is the best time for that!

 

Next, we’ll take a look at LEAPS and ETFs and how they can be used by a conservative option investor.   

 

Saul…

wyomingkid100  
#65 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 7:33:00 AM(UTC)
wyomingkid100

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 29

Thanks Saul - well, the course was good, but not the golfer.

You have a fancier calculator than I, mine requires that I input the interest rate.  Do you think it is looking for the long term risk free rate?

thanks,

Karen

Karen OBoyle
albany37  
#66 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 11:27:27 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Karen asked when speaking about the interest rate automatically filled in by the option calculator at TradeKing -

"Do you think it is looking for the long term risk free rate?"

Yes, I'm guessing this is the rate the calculator finds.  I can find out one of these days and let you know if it's of importance to you.  I don't pay a lot of attention to the interest rate since I don't trade options based on my own premium calculations.  It's one of the factors involved, but is probably the least important to the premium calculation.  Volatility is the main man in that respect!

Saul...

Miriam  
#67 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 12:05:07 PM(UTC)
Miriam

Rank: Newbie

Posts: 2

Saul,

This workshop has been very informative to me. In this environment I have my portfolio in red numbers and I would like to learn more about investing. Besides the SSG.

I would like your recommendation of a book in Technical analysis and if it is good to learn that way to analyze stocks.

Another question is what about the method Point and Figure, I ask because I heard about it on the radio and it seems to be useful for some investors.

What is the best way to start investing in options? I like to see TV so, I watch CNBC and there are some traders that say that there is a direct relationship between the movement in price of the stock and the volume that they observe. So, Pete and John Najarian have their own website where, by subscription, will give recommendation of options. I am skeptical about somebody that can give recommendations on stocks, but what about that relationship of the volume of the stock and the price that will go up or down?

Options seems to me interesting but still complicated, it is a way to practice and have a tutorial before invest a penny in options?

I have seen the TV program options action and directly they say what they would buy for next month, do you have any subscription besides Stockcentral?

About the quality of the stocks you mentioned check in Stockcentral or in Manifestinvesting, I have both subscriptions and each gives different valuations about quality, for example the stock RIO has a quality rating of 8.9 in Take Stock Stockcentral and a 43.9 in Manifest, so is it a good quality stock?

Well, you want questions, you will get a lot of questions.

Thank you for your time sharing your knowledge here.

Regards,

Miriam.
albany37  
#68 Posted : Friday, March 13, 2009 2:56:19 PM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Hi Miriam,

We are away for the weekend and while I do have limited access to the Internet, it's not great.  I am also away from my desktop computer and my library so I don't have access to all the data and information I need to answer your questions.  However, I will send you a complete response once I get home on Sunday evening.

As far as technical analysis is concerned, I did a workshop about 18 or so months ago on Manifest Investing.  You are a member and so someone there can show you how to access this material if you can't find it.  I think it was in the Continuous Classroom.  I have a book in mind for you on TA, new edition just came out, and will forward that info to you once I get home.

As far as Point & Figure is concerned, the acknowledged leading expert in the US is a Virginia based analyst named Tom Dorsey.  His books on this subject are considered to be the best sources of information on the point and figure methodology.  Well, I was also involved in a review of Dorsey's point and figure book at the Investing for Growth forum, formerly the NAIC Growth Forum.  This is a free forum, but you do need to establish a user ID and password.  I'll send you further information on this once I get home.  I use point and figure charting a lot, but it's not in widespread use so it's hard to get someone to work along with.

Talk to you soon.  Have a great weekend and thanks for your questions.

Saul...

 

albany37  
#69 Posted : Sunday, March 15, 2009 4:36:07 PM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

I would like your recommendation of a book in Technical analysis and if it is good to learn that way to analyze stocks.

An excellent starter book with a decidedly gentle introduction to technical analysis is The Visual Investor (2nd Edition) by John Murphy.  You can get this book online at Amazon, but the information is screwed up.  They show the book's cover, but all the listed information and pricing is for the more expensive first edition.  Instead, take a look at the StockCharts site (http://stockcharts.stores.yahoo.net/viinjojmu.html) where you can get this book for $25.95 plus shipping. 

Another question is what about the method Point and Figure, I ask because I heard about it on the radio and it seems to be useful for some investors.

Point & Figure Charting is not nearly as popular as other charting methods, like Candlesticks, that are popular today.  I use Point & Figure a lot and like it, but it's hard to find other investors who use this approach.  The book to read for this subject is Point & Figure Charting: The Essential Application for Forecasting and Tracking Market Prices by Thomas Murphy. It is available at Amazon for $44.10  I would suggest you read Murphy's book first to see if technical analysis makes sense for you before buying Tom Dorsey's book.

What is the best way to start investing in options? I like to see TV so, I watch CNBC and there are some traders that say that there is a direct relationship between the movement in price of the stock and the volume that they observe. So, Pete and John Najarian have their own website where, by subscription, will give recommendation of options. I am skeptical about somebody that can give recommendations on stocks, but what about that relationship of the volume of the stock and the price that will go up or down?

The Najarians are selling their view of the market.  It may be right or wrong and I really like Jon's radio bits, but it's still an advisory service that won't teach you too much.  Save your money and read the Visual Investor instead.  As I recall, my copy is out on loan to a friend, Murphy does talk about the relationship between price and volume and it's not nearly as simple or trustworthy as some advisors make it out to be.

Keep in mind that technical analysis is not a magic way of analyzing stocks or the market that will bring instant success.  Be skeptical of people who claim or make it seem as though they are selling you instant success. 

Options seems to me interesting but still complicated, it is a way to practice and have a tutorial before invest a penny in options?

I believe that OptionsXpress.com lets you practice trading options, but I've never tried it so I can't tell you any more.  You may want to call their customer service department and inquire how this works.

I have seen the TV program options action and directly they say what they would buy for next month, do you have any subscription besides Stockcentral?

I subscribe to a Point & Figure charting service, but this is for folks who are really into this methodology.  Other than that, I do not currently subscribe to any other data or advisory service.

About the quality of the stocks you mentioned check in Stockcentral or in Manifestinvesting, I have both subscriptions and each gives different valuations about quality, for example the stock RIO has a quality rating of 8.9 in Take Stock Stockcentral and a 43.9 in Manifest, so is it a good quality stock?

TakeStock @ StockCentral and Manifest Investing calculate their quality ratings in different ways.  I have found several instances in which I thought quality ratings in each were too high or low in my opinion and more than a handful in which their respective ratings were quite different as you found for RHO.  I don't use Manifest anymore so I don't have any insights into how RHO's quality rating was determined.  The important thing is to be consistent.  If you use TakeStock, stick with it.  If you use, MI, do the same.  It's a little like not mixing data sources when you do a stock study.

Hope this helps.

Thanks.

Saul...

albany37  
#70 Posted : Monday, March 16, 2009 7:40:36 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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Sorry, but I got off track a little.  What follows this installment of the workshop will be material on the use of Bollinger Bands and RSI for option trading.  Then I'll cover LEAPS and move on to how record keeping for options, follwoed by an istallment on how option revenue is  treated for tax purposes.  Finally, I'll do a summary of the workshop and answer any questions you may have. 

 

Bollinger Bands

 

Trading bands or envelopes of various kinds have been around the technical analysis world for many years.  Trading bands are formed by plotting lines, based on a characteristic of an underlying, above and below price results, to define envelopes that offer clues to future developments and overbought/oversold levels.  Bands have been used to identify market or stock cycles, future price movements and volatility for many years.

 

In the late 70s, John Bollinger came up with an innovation in trading bands, while trading options and warrants.  Bollinger decided that volatility bands should be a key variable of a band based system and picked an upper and lower band limit of two standard deviations sandwiched around a 20 day moving average.  As data is added each day or tracking period, the changing standard deviations plot bands around the moving average. It is the bands that move with price changes, not price with band movement although it certainly looks that way.

 

Note that different moving averages can be used for shorter or longer moving averages, which necessitates slight changes in the standard deviation used.  I rarely change these metrics and use the two standard deviation and 20 day moving average pretty much all the time.

 

Bollinger Bands widen as prices become more volatile and narrow when prices consolidate or generally move sideways.  The narrowing of the bands suggests, but doesn’t guaranty, a fairly sharp breakout or expansion of the bands.  However, the direction of the breakout is undefined.  The longer the period of consolidation and that of the narrow bands, the more likely it is that the breakout will occur.

 

The 20 day moving average is representative of an intermediate term trend and has been vetted over almost 30 years of use as appropriate and effective.  The plus and minus two standard deviation Bollinger Band envelope captures about 95% of the price action.  Since volatility is a key, if not a critical component of option premium pricing and activity, I have found that standard Bollinger Bands have a natural rhythm that helps in trading options when used as further described in this and the next workshop installment on the RSI indicator. 

 

A StockChart.com candlestick chart for Pfizer (PFE) with an overlay of Bollinger Bands is shown at http://tinyurl.com/c7edo4.  Note the band undulations as price and volatility change over time.  This chart also shows a band narrowing in the middle of January (top, center portion of graph) which is followed by a widening of the bands with a breakout to the downside.  Lastly, please note for our purposes that once the price line, in this case it’s the candlesticks, touches or pierces the upper or lower band, it may hug the band being pierced or touched for a short time or for a longer duration. 

 

Here’s another example of Bollinger Bands using Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) as a stock of interest; see http://tinyurl.com/copthv.  The band narrowing in the JNJ chart that occurred in the middle of January was followed by a good sized downward move that may now have been reversed after a drop to the high 40s.  We’ll have to see if this scenario plays out as such after last week’s rally.  Bear market rallies are tough to decipher and it’s usually only after a couple of such grinding reverses, when very few willing sellers are left, that the market makes and holds an honest breakout.  

 

Bollinger teaches that moves outside the bands, these are the 5% price movements not captured within the bands, have the following meaning.  “A move outside the bands calls for a continuation of the trend, not an end to it.  Often, the first push of a major move will carry prices outside of the bands.  This is an indication of strength.”  On the other hand, “a sharp move outside the bands followed by an immediate retracement of that move is a sign of exhaustion” or a sign of weakness.   It takes but a moment to check for price movement within or outside the bands every day, and I try to do so for each of my established option positions.

 

Another characteristic of Bollinger Bands presumes that a move originating at one band tends to go to the other band. I have found that this doesn't happen as often as the literature suggests.   This band to band movement is useful for projecting price targets and yields revised targets over time that can be of help when contemplating repair tactics for an option trade that isn’t working out.

 

I now need to explain an important aspect of indicator use in technical analysis.  Most TA indicators rely on price.  Using several indicators, such as RSI and MACD, results in a multiple count of the same price information as used by these indicators.  This tendency to create investing forecasts based on the same criteria is called multicolinearity.  While many TA users think using several price based indicators makes good sense, any resulting confirmation isn’t reliable since the indicators all rely on the same metric, price.  Thus, the apparent confirmation in such a case will not help an investor and, in fact, may mislead him.  In short, it’s better to use indicators that use indicators that are not based on the same characteristic. Thus, selecting indicators based on price, volume and volatility is good, while selecting multiple indicators all based on a single characteristic, like price, is not too helpful. 

 

This slection of non-correlated criteria is what I do in my options forecasting efforts.  I use the relative strength index in conjunction with Bollinger Bands.  RSI is based on price while Bollinger Band results are based on volatility.  Since these indicators are based on different criteria, they work well together.

 

I have one last observation about technical analysis in general before moving on.  Technical analysis is not without its errors.  Neither is fundamental analysis.  There is no single analysis approach or TA indicator that works every time, all the time.  I’ve found over the years that it doesn’t pay to tweak or optimize indicators to make them work.  I try to keep the odds in my favor and I follow my method of trading options (or of performing stock studies) as rigorously as I can. I also honor my stops!

 

Next, we’ll take a look at the RSI indicator and see how it can be used in conjunction with Bollinger Bands to help an option trader make decisions.  

 

Saul…

albany37  
#71 Posted : Monday, March 16, 2009 7:47:56 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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Relative Strength Indicator (RSI)

 

The Relative Strength Index or RSI is a popular indicator introduced by R. Welles Wilder back in June 1978 in what is now Futures magazine.  It has found widespread acceptance in the world of technical analysis and has been ranked as one of the best TA indicators available by Colby & Meyers in their Encyclopedia of Technical Market Indicators.  RSI is widely available at many stock charting sites and in almost all TA software packages.

 

RSI is often confused with relative strength, a ratio that is derived from comparing a stock or fund with an index, two stocks with each other, two funds with each other or two indexes with each other to find which has been the better performer.   RSI, on the other hand, tries to evaluate the internal strength of a single stock, fund or index based on its price action over a selected trading period.  

 

When originally introduced, Wilder used a 14 day RSI.  Over time, 9 day and 25 day periods have also gained supporters.  The lower the look back period value used, the more volatile the indicator results will be.  I like to use the standard 14 day default period for all RSI measurements for the historical perspective it gives and for comparative purposes. 

 

In use, RSI is a price following oscillator that varies between 0 and 100.  The item to which RSI is being applied is considered to be oversold below 30 and overbought above 70.  RSI can stay below 30 or above 70 for longer periods of time than might otherwise be expected.

 

As traditionally used with stocks, RSI helps identify divergences which could presage a change in price and direction for the stock.  Suppose, for example, that a stock is making a new high while RSI fails to surpass its previous high.  This lack of confirmation by RSI is said to diverge from the stock’s price action thereby indicating an impending reversal by the stock.  Divergences can be bullish or bearish.

 

Here’s an example of RSI in action; see http://tinyurl.com/c6nbsq.  Look at the period between December 18, 2008 to December 29, 2008 where price was dropping while RSI stayed essentially unchanged.  That negative divergence would indicate a future bearish result that an investor might have decided to trade on.  Of course, since no such result can be guaranteed, our investor would use a stop loss order to get out of the trade if it didn’t go his way and let it run as long as RSI or other indicators signaled otherwise.  As it turned out in this instance, JNJ did fall in price.

 

Now look at the brownish bumps below the RSI 30 line that range from later February to March 9th.  This period below 30 tells me that RSI is oversold.  By itself, that is not of significance to me as an option trader.  However, when I look down to the price chart itself, through March 9th, I see that the price curve has moved away from the lower Bollinger Band and appears to be leveling off.  In a few days, that trend is confirmed by an upward price move by JNJ and I like my chances of buying JNJ shares at 48 or so and writing a near term (one or two months) call at a 50 strike price.  JNJ should continue upwards or level off above 50 by expiration and I’ll be called out of this trade.  If not, I’ll simply write another call on the same basis unless I believe that the company’s prospects or fundamentals have changed for the worse, in which case I’ll sell my JNJ stock and look for greener pastures.

 

Medtronics presents a similar picture; see http://tinyurl.com/dl7ztz.  From late February to about March 12th, RSI for MDT was below 30.  As RSI edged upward, MDT’s price began to move away from the lower band and turned up.  Again, an example of a favorable move in RSI from below the oversold level of 30 that is reflected in a price move by the underlying stock.  I would have bought MDT around 25.5 and written slightly in the money calls with a strike price of 25.

 

Now this all sounds and looks great, but as I stated before, there is no such thing as a perfect investment system.  In TA, if you decide to make a trade, you also decide at the same time what your “get out of jail” price is.  If MDT dropped after I put the above-noted trade in place, I would have likely decided to get out of the trade, buy back the call and sell the stock, if MDT dropped by 15%.  I could have also used a 20% drop as a trigger.  Note that even moderately loose stops can eject you from what often turns out to be a profitable trade.  My own personal experience has been that 20% works okay for me, but I will drop down to 15% stop loss order if I’m at all nervous about the stock.

 

Take a look at the chart for Aflac; see http://tinyurl.com/cjwu76.  There is a clear narrowing of the bands for the first 10 or so trading days in January 2009.  Around January 12th, AFL falls out of bed and starts a significant downward move in price.  Around January 26th, the price moves away from the lower band at the same time that AFL’s RSI value dips below 30.  “This is a good setup,” I say and proceed to buy AFL around 23 and sell 25 near term calls. 

 

However, the follow-through is not good and AFL slides a little further down and sideways until it accelerates its price drop and falls to less than $12 a share.  Not only was my stop loss of around $18 hit, but notice also the lack of follow through by RSI. By the time AFL reached $22, its RSI had been gently sliding lower as opposed to a move up that would have confirmed validity of the breakout from below 30.  Thus, I had two reasons to get out of this trade, price drop and a reversal or failure to follow-thru by RSI.  Both would have supported exiting this trade.

 

If you now look at the period around March 9th, you’ll see that price has once again moved away from the lower band and indicated a likelihood of moving up again.  In this instance, however, RSI, while it touched the 30 level, didn’t technically get to an oversold position.  I know option traders who would have initiated a trade regardless of the RSI level (close to 30 equates to 30 for some) for AFL and others who would have looked elsewhere.  Your money, your choice, but I think Aflac has been financially strained by the recession and I would not be inclined to make this trade if there are other, potentially profitable and less stressful trades to make.

 

Keep in mind that I’m still looking at charts for companies that I’ve identified as being of good quality.  You can still take a loss trading options on a quality stock, but you will certainly minimize that possibility by not straying from the path of quality which is to me, the surest way to get hurt trading options.  That and not adhering to your stops or trying to stretch your system because it’s different this time.

 

Next, we’ll take that promised look at LEAPS.

 

Saul…

detlo001@umn.edu  
#72 Posted : Monday, March 16, 2009 10:10:10 AM(UTC)
detlo001@umn.edu

Rank: Newbie

Posts: 5

Saul,
I have read where some people use collars only during the earnings release time frame to protect from unexpected news.
Barry
albany37  
#73 Posted : Monday, March 16, 2009 11:06:45 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Hi Barry,

You are correct.  Many people use a low or no cost collar to protect against bad news as when an earnings report is due out shortly and an investor wants to hedge against a significant price drop with one option (a put) if the earnings are bad, but pay for that option by selling another option (a call). 

Thanks for mentioning the bad news collar.

Saul...

albany37  
#74 Posted : Tuesday, March 17, 2009 4:50:00 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Hi all,

I wanted to clarify a few points with respect to Bollinger Bands and RSI. I was so focused on options that I forgot to make the following points clear.

1.  Both Bollinger Bands and RSI can be used on individual stocks, ETFs, commodities, indexes and derivatives like options.  Their use is not limited to options.

2.  While Bollinger Bands can be used by themselves, conventional wisdom calls for and the overwhelming majority of BB users employ another indicator in tandem with the bands.  Three favorites in this respect are RSI, an indicator called MACD (pronounced Mac-D; Moving Average Convergence Divergence) and Stochastics.  I believe this is the order of their popularity based on my experience with technical analysis.  I much prefer using RSI in conjuntion with Bollinger Bands and have had my best results with this combination, but I have two friends who swear by MACD.

3.  If you tweak the moving average used in Bollinger Bands, you should make a commensurate tweak in the other indicator used in conjunction with the bands.

4.  If you change either or both indicators, make sure you write that change along with details of your trade so you have a record of the basis of the trade along with the TA parameters used.

Any questions, please let me know.

Saul...

wyomingkid100  
#75 Posted : Tuesday, March 17, 2009 6:33:30 AM(UTC)
wyomingkid100

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 29

Hi Saul, I'm not clear on your point re. setting stops.  My question is that should I get stopped out of a posion, I'm not allowed to sell that position if it is a covered call and I don't understand how or even if its possible to set a stop on an option?.  Do you mean you set these stops on paper only, and then watch the position closely?

Thanks for your help.

Karen

Karen OBoyle
albany37  
#76 Posted : Tuesday, March 17, 2009 8:47:31 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70

Hi Karen,

I'm not clear on your point re. setting stops.  My question is that should I get stopped out of a posion, I'm not allowed to sell that position if it is a covered call and I don't understand how or even if its possible to set a stop on an option?. 

If your broker has cleared you to sell naked calls, that's Level 5 I believe, then you can sell the stock first and let your option position go naked since the call isn't going anywhere if the underlying stock has tanked.  I do try to sell the stock position first and then buy back the call a little more slowly in case there's a bounce.

As your time trading options expands, your broker may bump your level up if you ask.  I did this about every 6 weekes when I first started until I got to where I wanted to be.  On the other hand, you can have a high trading level in case you need it, but not use all the capabilities of your level.  For example, although I can, I have never sold a naked call.

Do you mean you set these stops on paper only, and then watch the position closely?

Yes, I do this in my trading notebook.  I remind myself about my stops each morning before the market opens just to make sure I'm in tune with my positions.  Note that these written stops are on the stock. You really don't have to worry too much about stops on option prices  unless you are trading some exotic combinations.

According to Investopedia, whether you set your stop on the stock or the option is a matter of personal preference. Most exchanges allow stop-loss orders in options; however, most brokerage firms do not allow them for various reasons. Check with your broker.

Saul...

wyomingkid100  
#77 Posted : Tuesday, March 17, 2009 9:27:28 AM(UTC)
wyomingkid100

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 29






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thanks - I'll check on upping the options level with my broker.
Great seminar!
Happy St. Paddy's and may your pockets be heavy and your heart be light.
Karen
style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 10:48 AM
Subject: [StockCentral -- The Classroom]: RE: Options Education (0c1f3bfa-0710-4c84-a596-3a59fabe7fd4)

From the The Classroom forum at StockCentral.com, Saul Seinberg writes:

Hi Karen,

I'm not clear on your
point re. setting stops.  My question is that should I get stopped out of
a posion, I'm not allowed to sell that position if it is a covered call and I
don't understand how or even if its possible to set a stop on an option?. 

If your broker has cleared you to sell naked calls,
that's Level 5 I believe, then you can sell the stock first and let your
option position go naked since the call isn't going anywhere if the underlying
stock has tanked.  I do try to sell the stock position first and then buy back the call a little more slowly in case there's a bounce.

As your time trading options expands, your broker may
bump your level up if you ask.  I did this about every 6 weekes when I
first started until I got to where I wanted to be.  On the other hand,
you can have a high trading level in case you need it, but not use all the
capabilities of your level.  For example, although I can, I have never sold a naked call.

Do you mean you set these stops on paper only, and then watch the position closely?

Yes, I do this in my trading notebook.  I remind
myself about my stops each morning before the market opens just to make sure
I'm in tune with my positions.  Note that these written stops are on the
stock. You really don't have to worry too much about stops on option prices  unless you are trading some exotic combinations.

According to Investopedia, whether you set your stop on
the stock or the option is a matter of personal preference. Most exchanges
allow stop-loss orders in options; however, most brokerage firms do not allow them for various reasons. Check with your broker.

Saul...





Posted by: Saul Seinberg


To view the complete topic, reply, or unsubscribe to this topic please visit: title=http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx href="http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx">http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx


Karen OBoyle
wyomingkid100  
#78 Posted : Tuesday, March 17, 2009 9:27:36 AM(UTC)
wyomingkid100

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 29






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leftMargin=0 topMargin=0 acc_role="text" CanvasTabStop="true"
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thanks - I'll check on upping the options level with my broker.
Great seminar!
Happy St. Paddy's and may your pockets be heavy and your heart be light.
Karen
style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 10:48 AM
Subject: [StockCentral -- The Classroom]: RE: Options Education (0c1f3bfa-0710-4c84-a596-3a59fabe7fd4)

From the The Classroom forum at StockCentral.com, Saul Seinberg writes:

Hi Karen,

I'm not clear on your
point re. setting stops.  My question is that should I get stopped out of
a posion, I'm not allowed to sell that position if it is a covered call and I
don't understand how or even if its possible to set a stop on an option?. 

If your broker has cleared you to sell naked calls,
that's Level 5 I believe, then you can sell the stock first and let your
option position go naked since the call isn't going anywhere if the underlying
stock has tanked.  I do try to sell the stock position first and then buy back the call a little more slowly in case there's a bounce.

As your time trading options expands, your broker may
bump your level up if you ask.  I did this about every 6 weekes when I
first started until I got to where I wanted to be.  On the other hand,
you can have a high trading level in case you need it, but not use all the
capabilities of your level.  For example, although I can, I have never sold a naked call.

Do you mean you set these stops on paper only, and then watch the position closely?

Yes, I do this in my trading notebook.  I remind
myself about my stops each morning before the market opens just to make sure
I'm in tune with my positions.  Note that these written stops are on the
stock. You really don't have to worry too much about stops on option prices  unless you are trading some exotic combinations.

According to Investopedia, whether you set your stop on
the stock or the option is a matter of personal preference. Most exchanges
allow stop-loss orders in options; however, most brokerage firms do not allow them for various reasons. Check with your broker.

Saul...





Posted by: Saul Seinberg


To view the complete topic, reply, or unsubscribe to this topic please visit: title=http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx href="http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx">http://www.stockcentral.com/community/tabid/143/view/topic/postid/6900/ptarget/7155/language/en-US/Default.aspx


Karen OBoyle
albany37  
#79 Posted : Wednesday, March 18, 2009 6:06:12 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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LEAPS (1)

 

LEAPS, or Long Term Equity AnticiPation Securities, are long-term options, longer in term than the equity options we’ve been talking about in this workshop. that expire at dates up to 2 years and 8 months in the future, as opposed to shorter-dated options that expire much sooner.  LEAPS are available on equities, ETFs and indexes.  You can check the spreadsheet at http://www.888options.com/basics/leaps/leaps_3.jsp to see if an underlying of interest to you has LEAPS available.  By the way, to get additional details and explanations of how LEAPS can be used as investment tools, see the LEAPS course at http://www.888options.com/basics and select LEAPS in the horizontal menu at the top of the page.

Aside from their initial longevity, LEAPS are traded just like any other exchange listed option. In fact, many of the features of LEAPS are the same for shorter-term options:

  • Number of shares covered by the contract (100)
  • Exercise and assignment procedures
  • Trading procedures
  • Margin and commission costs

However, LEAPS differ from shorter-term options in several ways including availability, pricing, time decay, symbols and strategies.  Try the Options Council website listed above for a free LEAPS tutorial.  Michael Thomsett’s book “The LEAPS Strategist” (around $45 at Amazon, somewhat overpriced so try your library first or another book on LEAPS) runs through all of these differences along with a rehash of conventional option material.

Although they account for approximately 10% of all options traded, LEAPS are not available on many stocks, even those that have short term options.  If interest in having a LEAP on a specific stock is sufficient, that LEAP will be added.  Initially, a LEAP is

listed with three strike prices, one at the current price and two other strike prices 20% to 25% above and below the price of the underlying stock. Strikes may be added as the underlying stock moves. LEAPS only have one expiration month: January in two different years.

 

As time for a LEAP runs down to within one year of expiration, a new LEAP series will be initiated.  Existing LEAPS will continue to be listed and traded until their expiration. However, because of the now shorter length of time until expiration, these shorter term LEAPS will then trade as ordinary shorter-term options and lose their distinctive LEAPS label.  The new LEAP series with longer, further out expiration dates are then added.

 

As noted, LEAPS are used and traded much like ordinary options.  You can buy or sell a call or a put on a LEAP and they can be exercised and expire in the same manner as a short term option.  Our most important question is how can LEAPS help my investment club or a longer term, growth or GAARP investor?

 

LEAPS can act as a substitute for outright stock ownership.  The advantage is that you put up less money to purchase a LEAP call than if you bought the stock itself.  The positive aspects of a LEAP in this setting is that the long term period of a LEAP until expiration gives you significant time if which the underlying stock can move upward as your stock study tells you it should.  The LEAP period is initially much longer than that of an ordinary option so while you may still have to be right on time and direction, LEAP time is longer and works so much harder for you.

 

Your maximum loss in buying the LEAP call is the premium you’ve paid.  Since the extrinsic value of the leap falls more slowly at first, you do get to see how purchase of the underlying will work out before the premium drops significantly.  If things are going well, you can even sell the option or sell it at a slight loss, but always better than the straight stock purchaser who doesn’t enjoy the offset of the call premium collected by the covered call writer.

 

Next, additional aspects of LEAPS.

 

Saul…

albany37  
#80 Posted : Wednesday, March 18, 2009 6:08:18 AM(UTC)
albany37

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 70








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LEAPS (2)

 

Because of the length ‘til expiration, LEAPS carry a significant time or extrinsic value.  Selling covered calls using LEAPS can bring in larger premiums although the rate of return will not be as good as it is for a near term option.  While a LEAP may not always be as profitable on an annualized basis as an ordinary option, it’s one straightforward way to  get a large premium now, especially if you don’t want to keep on selling more calls as time goes on or initially invest in more calls. 

 

For example, as of this morning, AFL is at $16.15 a share.  An April 09 $17.50 call on AFL, if sold, will fetch a premium of about $1.75.  That’s not too shabby by the way.  The same parameter LEAP call with a January 2010 expiration provides a call premium of $5.00 per contract.  That’s not bad considering that it’s a 9 month position. 

 

Excluding commissions and other fees, a covered call based on the April 09 call gives the call seller an annualized return of slightly more than 250% for the April call if it is exercised and an annualized return of approximately 140% if it expires.  These returns are on a cash basis and will be higher if the underlying stock is bought on margin since less money is used in the trade.

 

The covered call LEAP trade on the January 2010 call, excluding commissions and other fees, gives the seller an annualized return of slightly more than 67% for the January call if it is exercised and an annualized return of almost 53% if it expires.  These returns are on a cash basis and will be higher if the underlying stock is bought on margin since less money is used in the trade. 

 

Hopefully, I've used theWith a LEAP, however, the underlying has much more time in which to recover if it stubles for a month or two or even longer coming out of the gate.  On the other hand, a near term option, like the April call above will expire because of an initial stumble and depending on how far the underlying sinks in price, you may end up with a loss or a significantly reduced return.  The premium on a LEAP is determined on its sale and guaranteed for you.  The premiums on near term calls depend on how often you can resell calls through the period in which the LEAP exists.  There’s no clear answer here, near term or LEAP, so think about your outlook and risk tolerance and decide accordingly.

 

I’m sure many of you will be interested in that level of return on AFLAC, a company that most of us know as excellent based on its past performance.  Many of us have owned or still own AFL.  However, there are rumors about AFL’s investment portfolio and financial strength and this concern is reflected in higher volatility and higher than usual premiums.  The downside risk is that AFL can drop from here and while you’ll keep the premium on either call, you’ll have to be nimble to stay plus on either position to avoid being saddled with a poorly performing stock. 

 

Please note that the use of AFL in the example trades above, or trades on other options or underlyings discussed in this workshop, are cited for educational purposes only.  No investment advice is given, intended or implied.  In fact, this trade looks too good to be true so please exercise caution when trading options and always perform your own due diligence and consult with your own advisors to determine if a particular option trade is appropriate and safe for you. 

 

Hopefully, I've used the calculator correctly in which case the above results are as they should be.  However, I suggest you check my results just in case I did get something wrong.

 

You may be asking where the above return figures came from.  Actually, there’s another option tool that is simple to use and free which provided this information.  I haven’t mentioned it before as I was trying to cover all of the base material in the workshop before sending you off to play around with this very useful tool.

 

Go to http://www.optionseducation.org/resources/covered_call_calculator.jsp and meet the Option Council’s clever Covered Call Calculator.  Type in the stock or underlying symbol and click on “Go.”  Default values for some of the variables will be inserted for you.  Change the expiration date to what you want and click on “Calculate” to get return information like that above for the option of interest to you.  Note also the option symbol at the top of the right hand column which you should write down for use when you enter your covered call trade.  I usually print out the final page of what the Call Calculator shows once I’ve finished calculating returns and playing “what ifs” in the calculator.

 

Next, we’ll take a look at record keeping requirements and taxes and review some fundamental aspects of both.      

 

Saul…

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