Thought I'd ask a question of this forum on how folks approach their options trading.
Options open up a wide range of possibilities to make (and lose) money, not only on price movement but on volatility and time. There are many well documented options strategies, verticals, time spreads, straddles, diagonals, butterflies etc. which take advantage of these factors.
Rather than discuss the merits or workings of a particular options strategy I am curious to know how folks approach their options positions. From what I've read I pick up 2-3 themes (please add this is just my observation).
a) Find a setup (fund or tech) in the underlying and apply a strategy, then track exit rules (eg straddle on low IV with up and coming news events, or vertical on stock breaking resistance anticipating price move etc)
b) Adapt a strategy for trading a particular vehicle (eg I've heard quite a few folks selling strangles on the FTSE 100, front month so much out of the money etc)
c) Start with some view on the underlying but then adapt and modify position over time to reduce risk/lock in profits.
I guess c) is really the advanced form of a) or b). But it appears to me tracking the performance of a lot of options positions that to really make money one needs to be good at c).
I'd appreciate views and any insights folks are prepared to give on how they approach trading options and whether they've found my comment on c) to be true, or do you just use exit rules from the initial position.
P.S. If you're tempted to post something like 'options are complex and you need to understand them before trading' please don't. That is not the purpose of this question and it lengthens the thread without adding value.
Options open up a wide range of possibilities to make (and lose) money, not only on price movement but on volatility and time. There are many well documented options strategies, verticals, time spreads, straddles, diagonals, butterflies etc. which take advantage of these factors.
Rather than discuss the merits or workings of a particular options strategy I am curious to know how folks approach their options positions. From what I've read I pick up 2-3 themes (please add this is just my observation).
a) Find a setup (fund or tech) in the underlying and apply a strategy, then track exit rules (eg straddle on low IV with up and coming news events, or vertical on stock breaking resistance anticipating price move etc)
b) Adapt a strategy for trading a particular vehicle (eg I've heard quite a few folks selling strangles on the FTSE 100, front month so much out of the money etc)
c) Start with some view on the underlying but then adapt and modify position over time to reduce risk/lock in profits.
I guess c) is really the advanced form of a) or b). But it appears to me tracking the performance of a lot of options positions that to really make money one needs to be good at c).
I'd appreciate views and any insights folks are prepared to give on how they approach trading options and whether they've found my comment on c) to be true, or do you just use exit rules from the initial position.
P.S. If you're tempted to post something like 'options are complex and you need to understand them before trading' please don't. That is not the purpose of this question and it lengthens the thread without adding value.