Wonder what traders are talking about today?We’re here with the top 10 stories we’re sharing with colleagues today, covering topics like:The stock market in the first year since President Trump’s 2016 election victoryThe post-earnings collapse in fallen tech star Snap (SNAP)Whether the lucrative, exciting world of prop trading is right for youAnd more!So check out these links right now and get up to speed:1) A year in: U.S. stock market under Trump’s shadow (Reuters) One year ago, when it became clear that Republican Donald Trump had pulled a historic upset to defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton to the U.S. presidency, futures in the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled nearly 900 points.Read the Story ==>2) Snap plunges after huge revenue miss (CNBC) Snap dropped 16 percent after it missed on revenue during its third quarter earnings Tuesday. Snap also wrote down $39.9 million as a result of losses from unsold SpectaclesRead the Story ==>3) The Ultimate Guide to Prop vs. Retail Trading (T3 Live) If you want to be an active trader in individual stocks, you really only have two general paths: Become a professional trader (prop trader) or trade in a retail account. Let’s look at the advantages and disadvantages of both so you can figure out the right path for you.Continued Reading ==>4) America’s ‘Retail Apocalypse’ Is Really Just Beginning (Bloomberg) The so-called retail apocalypse has become so ingrained in the U.S. that it now has the distinction of its own Wikipedia entry. The industry’s response to that kind of doomsday description has included blaming the media for hyping the troubles of a few well-known chains as proof of a systemic meltdown.Continued Reading ==>5) How Implied Volatility Works (T3 Live) We’re going to dig into the single most important options pricing concept: implied volatility. If you don’t understand implied volatility, you don’t understand options. Period!Continued Reading ==>6) Ralph Northam wins Virginia’s governor race (The Economist)Observers braced for a late night. Virginia’s polls close at 7pm, and precincts in the diverse, densely populated suburbs of Washington, DC usually take a long time to come in.Continue Reading ==>7) Trading Scans: The Foundation for Winning Trades (T3 Live) Take a look at our latest trading scans, which can help you find potential capitulations and explosions out of consolidations. Get our exact metrics and replicate them yourself.Continue Reading ==>8) Broadcom takes page from Drexel playbook with Qualcomm offer (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) Broadcom is using a tactic popularized by corporate raiders in the 1980s to convince Qualcomm and its shareholders that it has the means to complete the biggest tech deal ever.Continue Reading ==>9) Deloitte Report: Over 26,000 Blockchain Projects Began in 2016 (CoinDesk) More than 26,000 new projects related to blockchain were created on code repository GitHub last year, according to data collected by Deloitte. For its new report – titled “Evolution of Blockchain Technology: Insights from the GitHub Platform” and published today – the professional services firm drew information from the development platform, which plays home to the code for over 86,000 blockchain initiatives, including major projects like bitcoin.Continue Reading ==> 10) Denzel Washington on the Power of Falling Forward (NY Times) In 2011, Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington explained why you need to embrace failure to be ready for success.
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Wonder what traders are talking about today?We’re here with the top 10 stories we’re sharing with colleagues today, covering topics like:President Trump’s choice to replace Janet Yellen as Fed ChairThe Fed’s rate decision, and what to look for in DecemberHow Sami Abusaad scored over $12K in a single tradeAnd more!So check out these links right now and get up to speed:1) Trump to Tap Fed’s Jerome Powell for Fed Chairman (Wall Street Journal) The White House has notified Federal Reserve governor Jerome Powell that President Donald Trump intends to nominate him as the next chairman of the central bank, according to a person familiar with the matter.Read the Story ==>2) Fed holds off on rate hike, opens door to December (CNBC) The Federal Reserve declined to raise interest rates at its policy meeting this week and said the late-summer hurricanes likely will not have much longer-term impact on overall economic activity. There was little in the post-meeting statement Wednesday to indicate that the Fed would hold off on raising rates again soon.Read the Story ==>3) Sami Abusaad: $12K+ in 1 Profit in 1 Day with Nautilus (T3 Live) In this special video, Nightly Game Plan Moderator Sami Abusaad takes you through an Earnings Play in fitness equipment company Nautilus (NLS). On Monday, October 30, Sami went short Nautilus at $16.35, just ahead of earnings. Sami got out Tuesday morning at $13.00 for a $3.35 per share profit. Continued Reading ==>4) Facebook Tops Sales Projections While Russia Ad Inquiry Unfolds (Bloomberg)Facebook Inc. reported another quarter of record sales, underscoring how far removed the social network’s business prospects are from the raging public debate about Russian political ads on its platform.Continued Reading ==>5) What’s the Economic Cost of Brexit? (Pineapples Tell a Tale) Britain is increasingly grappling with the bewildering economic consequences of its pending departure from the European Union. For one company, Nim’s Fruit Crisps, the impact is measured in the soaring cost of pineapple.Continued Reading ==>6) Catalonia: Puigdemont ‘will not return’ to Spain for questioning (BBC)Sacked Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont will not return to Spain to answer charges including rebellion, his Belgian lawyer has said. Speaking to the Associated Press, Paul Bekaert suggested Mr Puigdemont should instead be questioned in Belgium where he has been since Monday.Continue Reading ==>7) Options in Play: An Event-Driven CELG Trade (T3 Live) Earnings season is packed with opportunity if you know where to look. CELG came into the quarter reeling from a 1-2 punch of a downgrade and drug trial setback. There was reason to believe the stock still had room to move (either way), however, so we thought it set up well for a strangle into numbers.Continue Reading ==>8) Luxury auto brands are scrambling to avoid a blue Christmas (NPR) When financial markets surge to new records, sales of luxury cars usually rise, too. Instead, October U.S. auto sales reports on Wednesday showed that a collapse in sales of luxury sedans is accelerating.Continue Reading ==>9) The Dangerous Reason Why Bitcoin Just Hit Yet Another New High (Fortune)Bitcoin just keeps on rising in value. Just more than a week after breaking $6,000 for the first time, the Bitcoin price reached another new high of $6,300 a few days ago, and is now on track to set a new all-time record for the fourth day in a row. Continue Reading ==> 10) Hilde Lysiak, Reporter, Author, 10-Year Old (NY Times) The first book in the “Hilde Cracks the Case” series opens with 9-year-old Hilde Lysiak outside her local police station in the town of Selinsgrove, Pa., following up on a tip about a break-in on Orange Street. The on-duty officer refuses to divulge any information, but if she’s going to break the story in her newspaper, The Orange Street News, she has to investigate using six basic reporting questions: Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? Continue Reading ==>
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In this special video, Nightly Game Plan Moderator Sami Abusaad takes you through an Earnings Play in fitness equipment company Nautilus (NLS). On Monday, October 30, Sami went short Nautilus at $16.35, just ahead of earnings. Sami got out Wednesday morning at $13.00 for a $3.35 per share profit. In total, Sami earned $12,115.50 in this one-day trade! (watch the video to see Sami’s actual account statement) (click here to join the Nightly Game Plan and join Sami in these incredible trades!) Watch this video and learn about: Sami’s $34,000+ in profits for October How Sami measures expectations to figure out whether to go long or short The anatomy of Sami’s $12K+ in one day Nautilus play, including the entry, exit, and management plan The idea behind the unique Earnings Play Strategy, which is part of the Nightly Game Plan swing trading manual 24 successful earnings plays including Community Health Systems (CYH), Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO), and eBay (EBAY) Click here to learn about Sami’s Nightly Game Plan P.S. Earnings Season is still going strong. Be sure to check out this FREE Earnings Season resource: The Ultimate Guide to Trading Earnings Season
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In this special video, Nightly Game Plan Moderator Sami Abusaad takes you through his swing trading watchlist, and how he’s successfully trading through earnings season. You’ll get his take on the broader markets, how he’s playing the names on his earnings watchlist, and 4 fresh opportunities he’s playing now: Watch the video and learn about: How Sami made $5,774.21 on earnings plays and options trades in one day Why he is closely watching QQQ’s 20 day moving average A possible breakout failure on QQQ’s monthly chart Grubhub’s (GRUB) weekly buy setup The Weekly Sell Setup in New York Community Bankcorp (NYCB) The picture-perfect breakdown in Arlington Asset (AI) How you can take earnings plays alongside Sami 4 earnings plays Sami may be about to take 2 day trades Sami took in the Black Room Click here to learn about Sami’s Nightly Game Plan P.S. Earnings Season is still going strong. Be sure to check out this FREE Earnings Season resource: The Ultimate Guide to Trading Earnings Season
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Wonder what traders are talking about today?We’re here with the top 10 stories we’re sharing with colleagues today, covering topics like:Can Apple Overcome iPhone 8 Rumors?Amazon Putting Packages In Your Home When You’re Not ThereHow Changing the World Starts With Making Your BedAnd more!So check out these links right now and get up to speed:1) Scott Redler: Can Apple Overcome iPhone 8 Rumors? (T3 Live) There is lots of talk about soft demand for Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone 8. There are also rumors that they will run short on iPhone X supplies. So let’s focus on the technicals.Read the Story ==>2) Amazon Can Soon Put Packages in Your Home When You’re Not There – Here’s How it Works (Business Insider) Amazon will now allow deliveries inside your home when no one’s there. It’s part of the new Amazon Key program announced on Wednesday. To participate, customers need to be Amazon Prime members and own some special equipment, including a compatible smart lock and a security camera specially made for the program.Read the Story ==>3) Jeff Cooper: The End of the Volatility Fire Sale (T3 Live) The SPX went flat Tuesday, unable to rally back to prior day’s highs. It appears there is a lot of shorting just as big mutual funds try to keep this leviathan levitating into their October 31 fiscal year-end.Continued Reading ==>4) How A Two-Person Montana Company Ended Up With The Biggest Energy Contract In Puerto Rico (BuzzFeed News)Ten miles south of Whitefish, Montana, a paved road turns into gravel, before turning into forest. On one side, there’s a small horse farm. On the other, signs read “Private Property” and suggest the area is being patrolled in order to prevent poaching. At the end of a long private drive lined with towering pines, an RV is parked on the grass in front of a log and stone cabin.Continued Reading ==>5) US New Home Sales Soar to Highest Level in a Decade (U.S. News) Sales of new U.S. homes jumped last month to the highest level since October 2007, a sign that Americans — unable to find existing homes — are turning to new construction. Damage from last month’s hurricanes may have also inflated the data.Continued Reading ==>6) Google and Cisco Have Teamed Up in the Cloud Wars Against Amazon and Microsoft (Business Insider) Google Cloud has signed a partnership with Cisco to bridge their two technological worlds, in a bid to catch up with Amazon Web Services and its domination of the fast-growing cloud computing market.Continue Reading ==>7) 32 Stocks I’m Watching for Earnings Season (T3 Live)In this special video, Nightly Game Plan Moderator Sami Abusaad walks you through his earnings season swing trading watchlist. With volatility so low, not many trades triggered this week, so Sami’s going to take you through the 32 stocks Sami is watching for potential opportunities this earnings season:Continue Reading ==>8) Honolulu’s ‘Distracted Walking’ Law Takes Effect, Targeting Phone Users (NPR) Police in Honolulu on Wednesday will begin writing tickets for people who get distracted by their cellphones while walking in a crosswalk. Honolulu is the first major city in the country to pass such a law, citing a high rate of pedestrians being hit in crosswalks.Continue Reading ==>9) Will Facebook Kill All Future Facebooks? (Wired)In 2010, FOURSQUARE co-founder Naveen Selvadurai believed that his company, and several other social-media upstarts—Twitter, Tumblr, Path—could carve out successful niches against Facebook.Continue Reading ==> 10) One of the Most Motivational Speeches You’ll Ever Hear (YouTube) Watch this video and learn how the simple task of making your bed can set you up for success.
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In this special video, Strategic Swing Trader Moderator Sami Abusaad walks you through his earnings season swing trading watchlist. With volatility so low, not many trades triggered this week, so Sami’s going to take you through the 32 stocks Sami is watching for potential opportunities this earnings season: Watch the video and learn about: Why Sami is so excited about earnings season How you can take earnings plays alongside Sami The 11 bearish, and 21 bullish play on Sami’s Earnings Watchlist The weekly sell setup in Antero Resources (AR) Why Dr. Pepper (DPS) looks so good for a possible long-term short The climactic run-up in Sociedad Quimica (SQM), which may set up a great shorting opportunity The sub-$3 gold stock Sami is targeting for a long-term swing long The key level to watch in the Gold Miners (GDX) Plus analysis of more than a dozen other stocks! Click here to learn about Sami’s Strategic Swing Trader P.S. Earnings Season is still going strong. Be sure to check out this FREE Earnings Season resource: The Ultimate Guide to Trading Earnings Season
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Welcome back to our Introduction to Options series! By now we’ve covered: 1) The ABC’s of Puts and Calls And 2) How Implied Volatility Works Now, we’re going to explore another critical factor in options pricing: time You’re about to learn: How the passage of time impacts the value of an option The differences between short-dated and long-dated options How you can buy a call option, have the stock go up, and still lose money! This article is somewhat technical in nature. You don’t need to understand all the math. You certainly don’t need to know this formula: So just focus on learning the basic principles, and you’ll be a step ahead of options traders that fail to grasp the role of time in options. The Basics of Time’s Effect on Options Prices In our recent article on implied volatility, we identified the 7 basic factors that determine an option’s price: The price of the stock The strike price Type of option Time to expiration Risk-free interest rate Dividend policy Implied Volatility While implied volatility is the most important factor in an option’s price, time is a close second. Remember what we said about options — they’re a form of insurance. A call option is an insurance contract that pays off when the stock rises. And a put option is an insurance contract that pays off when the stock falls. And like a car, the faster a stock moves, the higher it costs to insure it with options. But what else affects the price of insurance? Time. Would it cost more to insure your car for 1 year? Or 2 years? Obviously, you pay more for 2 years of insurance coverage than 1. Why? Because over a 2-year period, there’s a much greater chance of something happening than over 1 year. And so it goes with options: the longer the time to expiration, the higher the price of the option (insurance). A Time Example with Facebook Options Let’s take a look at Facebook (FB) $175 call options across a wide range of expirations. As of the time of publication, the stock was trading at $176.46. Here are the prices for all FB $175 call options that are currently trading. They have expirations ranging from 2 to 793 days from today: As you can see, the $175 call option expiring in 2 days is priced at just $2. The option expiring in 93 days costs $9.61. And the call option expiring in 793 days costs $32.10! Why? Because again, options are a form of insurance. And it’s only logical 793 days of coverage costs more than 2 days of coverage. Theta Is Kryptonite to an Option Remember what I just said about our Facebook example. 793 days of coverage costs more than 2 days of coverage. And you know what? 793 days of coverage also costs more than 791 days of coverage… and 790 days of coverage, and 789 days of coverage… and so on. So all things being equal, options lose value as time passes. And theta is a measure of how fast that loss of value happens. Is Inherently Bad? No. Theta is simply a reality of the world of options trading. And it’s a concept you have to understand if you want to make money with options. Plus, there are strategies that actually take advantage of theta, though they are beyond the scope of this article. An Example of Theta, and How It Eats an Option’s Price At publication, the Facebook $175 call option expiring in 9 days is currently priced at $3.18. The stock is trading at $176.46. This means there is a premium of $1.72 built into the option. This is calculated as the strike price + the options price – current stock price, or $175 + $3.18 – $176.46 = $1.72. The amount of premium built into the option is affected by implied volatility and other factors. The higher the implied volatility, the higher the premium. Theta, or time decay, is the dollar amount by which this premium declines each day. You can find the theta of an option on virtually any trading platform. Theta is displayed as a negative number, typically without a dollar sign. So if you see a theta of -0.10, that means the option will decline by $0.10 per day, all things being equal. (we use dollar signs in this article to reinforce the fact that it is indeed a dollar amount) The theta for our Facebook $175 call expiring in 9 days is -$0.12. This means that if Facebook’s stock doesn’t move at all, it will be worth $0.12 less tomorrow, or $3.06. And that’s why time is an option’s kryptonite. If the underlying stock or ETF doesn’t move, the passage of time will reduce the value of your option. How Theta Varies Over Time Theta continually changes. And the closer an option is to expiration, the faster it loses value. Here is the theta for our Facebook $175 call options by each expiration: As you can see, the option expiring in 2 days has a theta of -$0.16. And the one expiring in 793 days has a theta of just -$0.02. This is a simple illustration of one of the most important concepts in options: the closer an option gets to expiration, the bigger the theta is. Why? Think of of it this way: if an option expires in 9 days, each day accounts for 11.1% of the time left to expiration. And if an option is expiring in 793 days, each accounts for just 0.13% of the time left to expiration. So it’s not going to change much. Now, let’s look at the theta table one more time, because there is an exception to the rule that the closer an options gets to expiration, the bigger the theta is. As you can see, the option expiring in 16 days has a theta of -$0.15, which is bigger than the -$0.12 theta of the option expiring in 9
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Wonder what traders are talking about today?We’re here with the top 10 stories we’re sharing with colleagues today, covering topics like:Why Hayman Capital Management’s Kyle Bass sees parallels with 1987The widespread belief that volatility is dead10 tips for success from Apple (AAPL) founder Steve JobsAnd more!So check out these links right now and get up to speed:1) Kyle Bass says this will be the first sign of a bigger market meltdown (MarketWatch) The stock market may never go down again. Maybe not such a far-fetched notion, when you consider the Dow industrials yesterday nailed its 50th record close of the year and paid a visit to the 23,000 milestone, which it looks set to revisit and maybe stick to today.Read the Story ==>2) Traders have never been more confident that volatility is dead (Business Insider) Traders have never been so sure that volatility in US stocks is over, at least looking one month ahead. Nothing quite demonstrates that mindset more than the chart below.Read the Story ==>3) How Implied Volatility Works (T3 Live) If you don’t understand implied volatility, you don’t understand options. Period. Read this article and learn how implied volatility impacts the price of an option.Continued Reading ==>4) China’s Xi lays out vision for ‘new era’ led by ‘still stronger’ Communist Party (Reuters)Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday laid out a confident vision for a more prosperous nation and its role in the world, stressing the importance of wiping out corruption and curbing industrial overcapacity, income inequality and pollution.Continued Reading ==>5) Bitcoin is a ‘speculative bubble’ and unlikely to become a real currency, UBS says (CNBC) Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin are in a “speculative bubble” and are unlikely to become mainstream currencies, according to UBS. There are over 1,000 cryptocurrencies, bitcoin being the biggest by market capitalization, and many have seen huge rises in value over the past few years. Bitcoin for example is up over 470 percent year-to-date.Continued Reading ==>6) Treasury secretary: Pass a tax bill or markets will tank (Politico) Steven Mnuchin has a stern warning for Congress: You could blow up the stock market if you fail to cut taxes. The Treasury secretary said Wall Street’s big run-up following the election of President Donald Trump is largely based on expectations of Congress passing a major tax-relief bill, and failure to do so could have significant consequences.Continue Reading ==>7) 6 Tips for Picking the Right Stocks for Day Trading (T3 Live) You can spend years learning about moving averages, gaps, trendlines, and indicators. But if you’re day trading the wrong stocks, you’re setting yourself up for failure. If you ever find yourself asking yourself “what should I trade now,” then this article is for you.Continue Reading ==>8) Volvo Prepares to Take on Tesla with a Revamped Polestar (Wired) Volvo is in the midst of a reincarnation. The Swedish automaker is leaving behind its former life as the maker of super safe, super boxy wagons, and embracing an existence dedicated to technological prowess, electric propulsion, and svelte design.Continue Reading ==>9) Google’s AI can create better machine-learning code than the researchers who made it (TNW)Google’s AutoML system recently produced a series of machine-learning codes with higher rates of efficiency than those made by the researchers themselves. In this latest blow to human superiority the robot student has become the self-replicating master.Continue Reading ==> 10) Get Steve Job’s 10 Rules for Success (YouTube) Watch this video and learn 10 important rules for success from Apple (AAPL) founder Steve Jobs, including why you must have passion for what you do.
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In our introduction to options trading, we discussed some basics of options, like the differences between calls and puts, how options contracts work, and why options is a zero sum game. Now we’re going to dig into the single most important options pricing concept: implied volatility. If you don’t understand implied volatility, you don’t understand options. Period. What Is Implied Volatility? Implied volatility is exactly what it sounds like: it is the amount of volatility implied by the price of an option. Put another way, by paying a certain price for an option, we are implying that the stock will have a certain level of volatility. There are 7 basic factors that determine an option’s price: The price of the stock The strike price Type of option Time to expiration Risk-free interest rate Dividend policy Implied Volatility Factors 1-6 have something in common: they are pre-determined. Implied volatility is different because it is determined by how much we pay for the option in question. Options are effectively insurance. A call option is an insurance contract that pays off when the stock rises. And a put option is an insurance contract that pays off when the stock falls. And like a car, the faster a stock moves, the higher it costs to insure it with options. It costs more to insure a Dodge Viper than a Honda Odyssey minivan. Why? Because there’s more potential for trouble (volatility) with a 645-horsepower sports car than a minivan. (WARNING: This video may Not be Safe for Work…) An Implied Volatility Example with Tesla As we’re writing this on October 17, 2017, Tesla (TSLA) is trading at $354.72. The implied volatility on the TSLA $355 December calls expiring in 59 days is 40%. What exactly does that 40% number mean? To successfully trade options, you don’t need to understand all the nitty gritty of options math. But you do need to understand the basic fundamentals of options prices. So let’s jump back to Statistics 101 so you understand what that 40% implied volatility number means. We use implied volatility to lay out the implied 1-standard deviation move in the underlying stock. This is the movement that is expected 68% of the time. Here is the formula to determine a 1 standard deviation move using implied volatility: Stock Price * Implied Volatility * Square Root of Calendar Days/365 = 1 Standard Deviation For our Tesla example, this becomes: $354.72 * 40% * .40205 = $57.05 This implies a 68% chance Tesla will move $57.05 or less by expiration in December. Put another way, it implies a 68% chance that Tesla will stay between $297.67 and $411.77. (calculated as $354.72 minus and plus $57.05) If implied volatility was just 30% instead of 40%, there would be less implied movement. And if it was 50%, there would be more implied movement Take a look at this table of implied stock movements at different implied volatility readings: As you can see, if implied volatility on our option is 30%, the implied movement (up or down) is just $42.78. And if it was 50%, it would imply movement of $71.31! You don’t need to do this math every time you look an option. Just remember this: the higher the implied volatility, the more movement in the underlying stock you need to make money on the option. Why? Because the higher the implied volatility, the more you’re paying for the option. Implied Volatility Levels on Different Kinds of Stocks Remember our car insurance comparison. The insurance company will charge a lot of money to insure a 645 horsepower Dodge Viper because there’s a lot of potential for trouble. Sellers of options are no different: if a stock can move a lot, the options seller (who is in effect selling insurance) will require a high premium for the related options. Here is a table showing implied volatility readings for at-the-money call options expiring in 59 days on 5 popular stocks: Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI), a very volatile semiconductor stock with a $860 million market cap, has 60% implied volatility. Snap (SNAP), a volatile tech name, is at 54%. And Pfizer (PFE), a slow moving pharma giant, has implied volatility of just 14%. Why the difference? AAOI and SNAP are much more volatile, so options seller demands higher options prices — which means higher implied volatility. Since Pfizer doesn’t move much, the seller must charge a lower price to draw in options buyers. Our TSLA Option Under Different Implied Volatility Scenarios Let’s take a look at our December TSLA $355 call one more time. Using the CBOE’s options calculator, we can calculate the price of the option under various scenarios. With a stock price of $354.72 and implied volatility of 40%, the December 355 call has a value of $22.95. But if we assume implied volatility of 30%, the value of the option drops to just $17.28. Here’s a table showing the value of the option at different implied volatility levels: As you can see, at 50% implied volatility, the option would be worth $28.61. Implied vs. Future Volatility As we’ll discuss in our next article on time decay (or theta), options are decaying assets. All things being equal, an option loses value every single day. You need movement — or volatility — in your favor to offset the impact of that time decay. So when you buy an option, you are essentially going long volatility on the underlying stock, ETF, index, or commodity. You are saying that the actual volatility in the future will be greater than the implied volatility that is currently priced in. And all things being equal, if you are long options, you want implied volatility to rise. However, there are some differences between calls and puts. When stocks fall, implied volatility typically rises. That’s great for owners of put options. But it’s not so good for calls, because a falling stock price will hurt the options price, and offset the impact of higher implied volatility. Implied Volatility
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In this special video, Nightly Game Plan Moderator Sami Abusaad walks you through his current swatch list with his top swing trade picks so you can see how he spots potential setups. Typically, Sami focuses on a single swing trading setup, but since there weren’t any noteworthy trades, Sami decided to take you inside a key part of his trading process instead: In the video, Sami will show you: The sideways trend in QQQ, which provides a backdrop for bullis trades The recent broken uptrend in Activision Blizzard (ATVI) Chicago Bridge & Iron’s (CBIE) Weekly Sell Setup Sami’s 1-2-3 Play in Foot Locker (FL), which gave him an initial profit of $723* The Climactic Setup in Green Dot (GDOT), which may be reversing Norstrom’s (JWN) breakdown bar And more! *(click here for a breakdown of our P&L calculations) Click here to learn about Sami’s Nightly Game Plan
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