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Summary
I decided to post this last installment of the options workshop early so I could attend to a few other matters. This is the concluding segment of the workshop. I plan to drop by over the next few weeks to answer any questions, but I’ll yield the StockCentral classroom to another instructor. It’s been my pleasure to try to help further your options education.
As promised, here are my top 10 rules for trading options:
10. Remember to treat the stocks on which you write covered calls as inventory, not long term investments; save the love for your family and friends
9. Diversify as best you can across several options and sectors, utilizing covered calls and naked puts, as allowed, and steer clear of multi-leg, exotic option trades
8. Don’t buy underlying stocks on margin just to boost leverage (keep safety in mind) and keep your position size in alignment with the usual quantity of shares you buy
7. Promptly record all of your option transactions and be consistently aware of your overall tax status, particularly if you pay or will have to pay estimated taxes
6. Learn to use basic online option decision making tools well and take some option education courses, especially the free ones offered by your broker and the Options Industry Council
5. Don’t be tempted by premium alone and always know what your annualized returns will be and what the return profile for each trade actually is
4. Keep commissions low; remember you’re trading to create income for yourself, not for your broker
3. Set mental stops before entering a trade and honor them on a consistent basis unless the news about the underlying stock or market events argue for a change in strategy
2. Sell covered call options, don’t buy them and when you sell, select near term options to maximize the benefits of time decay for yourself
1. Pick quality stocks on which to write covered calls
The foregoing list is mine, culled from various books, seminars, experiences and personal goals in trading options. Other option traders will have different criteria and tactics. Their top 10 lists will be different and the order of items in their lists might vary considerably from mine. The bottom line is that you must have a set of trading rules that you believe in and follow on a consistent basis in order to successfully trade options or stocks. My list is a good starting place, but don’t be reluctant to move items around or to modify the list to fit your risk profile, investment strategies and growing level of experience.
Also, please consider the following. In spite of any desire you may have to get down and dirty with options right away, that is to trade with real money right away, please take at least two or three months and do some paper trading of a few positions, say 3 to 5 covered calls and perhaps a naked put or two, to see how it works out for you. Team up with another investor on this recommendation and see how you both do and help each other understand how your option positions are reacting as time shrinks and the underlying stocks and premiums change going forward.
By way of supporting my point of view that covered calls can be good for your financial health, I offer this article from Bank Investment Consultant for your information: see http://www.bankinvestmentconsultant.com/bic_issues/2009_3/a-cash-cow-in-a-bear-market2661097-1.html. It is a fairly recent article that I came across last week and decided to include in this summary segment for you. The investors and advisors quoted in the article, echo a lot of what I’ve said, which I believe legitimizes covered calls as a key, but definitely not the only investment strategy. I also know for a fact that at least one advisor, despite what he says in the article, does lower his standards somewhat in picking companies to write covered calls on. The key is that the standards are only slightly lowered and that an effort to bias selections in favor of successful performance (quality) is still made.
My favorite covered call setup looks like this:
a) quality company (you need to decide this yourself; don’t lower your standards too much),
b) near term expiration (one or two months is best so you’re selling an option with high time decay, which works in your favor),
c) current price of underlying stock is about 25¢ to $1.00 away from strike price so premium is higher and you still have room for some price appreciation by the underlying stock (this is always a trade-off), and
d) premium sufficient to return a minimum annualized return of X%, where X% meets your targeted monthly average cash flow requirement.
I don't always find this setup in the real world as specified and one or more of the above requirements may be adjusted depending upon market and volatility conditions, but not by so much as to jeopardize principal by more than your risk tolerance will accept. For example, my personal rule of thumb is that no single covered call position I enter into should risk more than 5% of my option account capital. My stops will reflect this and I will track the trade for this purpose to make sure I protect my capital.
Good luck, happy option trading and don’t be a stranger to StockCentral . Thank you for sticking around for the entire workshop.
Now, I’m off to work on my presentations for InvestEd 2009. I hope to see many of you there and I am looking forward to discussing option questions in person with you. I have it on good authority that Mary Ann Davis is working on her InvestEd options presentation and I can assure you it will be worthwhile for you to attend.
Thank you.
Saul…