Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Selling puts and Selling Calls are low risk and yield high gains when done correctly. Yes, they are not ZERO risk. OP doing well.
What is long tail risk? Seems poor risk management — if you sell a call, then the price rises you lose all upside as buyer captures stock appreciation — and if it drops you still lose almost everything except the premium — and if a stock starts dropping you can’t sell until option expires in case they do decide to exercise call (unlikely I guess).
Anonymous wrote:You seem very young, OP. You'll crash and burn, or get tired of those little games when other activities impinge on your life (spouse, kids, job). And then you'll understand that you should have bought early and just let the money pile up while you were busy doing other things. Your bizarre obsession about "making money while not owning stock" is [b]not sustainable in the long term, and so far you've made piddling money. Again, you seem very inexperienced.
Anonymous wrote:Selling puts and Selling Calls are low risk and yield high gains when done correctly. Yes, they are not ZERO risk. OP doing well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You seem very young, OP. You'll crash and burn, or get tired of those little games when other activities impinge on your life (spouse, kids, job). And then you'll understand that you should have bought early and just let the money pile up while you were busy doing other things. Your bizarre obsession about "making money while not owning stock" is not sustainable in the long term, and so far you've made piddling money. Again, you seem very inexperienced.
He made 30% in one year with consistent weekly profits. How much did you make in the last 12 months, percentage wise?
Sockpuppeting? Why does this need to be a dick measuring contest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You seem very young, OP. You'll crash and burn, or get tired of those little games when other activities impinge on your life (spouse, kids, job). And then you'll understand that you should have bought early and just let the money pile up while you were busy doing other things. Your bizarre obsession about "making money while not owning stock" is not sustainable in the long term, and so far you've made piddling money. Again, you seem very inexperienced.
He made 30% in one year with consistent weekly profits. How much did you make in the last 12 months, percentage wise?
Anonymous wrote:You seem very young, OP. You'll crash and burn, or get tired of those little games when other activities impinge on your life (spouse, kids, job). And then you'll understand that you should have bought early and just let the money pile up while you were busy doing other things. Your bizarre obsession about "making money while not owning stock" is not sustainable in the long term, and so far you've made piddling money. Again, you seem very inexperienced.