Understanding Option Delta - It's Not As Simple As You Might Think!
Wednesday, August 10th 4:30 pm ET / 1:30 pm PT
Keith Harwood, President and Chief Options Strategist for Option Hotline, will be joining us to discuss the importance of Option Delta and how it changes when market inputs change.
There's a lot more to Option Delta than you might think. As stock price moves, time passes, and option implied volatility changes, the Option Delta changes with it. In a market driven by risk aversion and panic selling one day, fear of missing out on the rally the next, and large changes in implied volatility throughout, it's important to understand how the Option Delta impacts returns.
Traders of every level can benefit by further improving their trading strategies with a better understanding of Option Delta, so don't miss out on this opportunity.
Sign Up Here Now to take advantage of this great trading opportunity. All attendees will receive a FREE GIFT, so save your spot today!
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Tomorrow, you could begin doubling your account every single month starting with one letter.
The letter will come from a 20-year trading professional named Ian Cooper. He says, “In 2022, following my trades you would be doubling even tripling your account some months. Let me show you how.”
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Three Top ETFs for a Potential Green Energy Boom by Ian Cooper
Green stocks could see brighter days ahead.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., said they reached a deal on climate spending. In fact, the “Inflation Reduction Act of 2022” now includes $369 billion for clean energy provisions.
All could be great news for solar, hydrogen, wind, and EVs to name a few.
At the moment, according to CNBC, here’s some of what’s in the bill.
Manufacturing clean energy products, including a $10 billion investment tax credit to manufacturing facilities for things like electric vehicles, wind turbines, and solar panels, and $30 billion for additional production tax credits to accelerate domestic manufacturing of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and critical minerals processing.
Cutting emissions, including $20 billion for the agriculture sector and $3 billion to reduce air pollution at ports.
The following four major factors go into determining the price – the premium – of an option.
Price of the Underlying Instrument – Whatever moves the price of the underlying instrument will have an effect on the price of an option, with the extent of the effect depending on the proximity of the underlying price to the strike price. Options prices do not track the price of the underlying instrument precisely. An in-the-money option will react differently than an out-of-the-money option.
Strike Price – The strike price is the key pricing point against which all elements of the options price can be compared. It is the dividing line between profit and loss and whether an option will be exercised at time of expiration.
Millennials net worth has doubled since pandemic …So why so much concern about today's economic health? Alan says those kids have done pretty, pretty well. Turns out that 70% of all Americans went up 20% last year and 40 percent in the last three years. Their greatest asset is really appreciated in inflation. As has everyone in the last few years and this housing price boom, and that is what is contributing in the net worth double. Phil points out no doubt that a strong housing market is good, but we are seeing signs that it is topping. Millennials are not like us old guys. They have been looking at the investment side in the market at a younger age.
2) GAS DOWN UP Gasoline is down 60 days in a row and natural gas up 50% in weeks... What is a better buy? Phil says it depends on your tolerance for risk, natural gas has the biggest one month up move in the history of the futures contract. The biggest move and the highest price since 2008. If NG shipping reopens, natural gas has a very good shot to go back to an all-time high. Maybe get above $10, maybe 15. so that will leaved gasoline prices in the dust if that happens. Alan agrees with everything Phil has said. We have been doing a show for decades and we have talked about there was too much natural gas, so guess what, fundamentals change over time. Prices were above 14 in 2005 and 2008, so a lot of upside. But also crude oil which gasoline we drive with is derived from and stabilize between 98 and 100 right now. So I don't see a whole lot more downside. I am still bullish on the energy sector.
3) Earnings Growth Microsoft and Google both made $16 billion in pure profit for the quarter how can there be a Tech wreck? Alan states these companies are making huge, huge, huge profits. It's not like they are losing money, so I don't understand the angst and concern. I don't think that tech is over if we can take out those highest from June and all of the stock index, back above the S&P 4200 we can take out the high then we can get a serious bounce and a lot of upside reversals in stocks.
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