Showing posts with label Price Headley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Price Headley. Show all posts

Thursday, November 11, 2010

"6 'W's' of Forex"....Price Headly Gave This His Stamp of Approval!

Legendary trader,coach, and mentor Price Headly just put his stamp of approval (which he rarely does) on the new Forex Toolkit from Scott Downing!

This is HUGE!

I've followed Price for a long time, and respect whatever he says...and if he says Scott's kit is something I should have, then I'm getting it ASAP!

Which is what I recommend you do...

Get it Here at Big Trends.Com

Enjoy the Forex Toolkit.........I KNOW I AM!


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Monday, October 11, 2010

Bigger Gains, Less Time. Tap Into the Potential of Weekly Options

From Price Headley's  "Potential of Weekly Options Series".....

Traders spoke, and the exchanges listened. And, if the growing popularity of the new weekly expiration options is any indication, these shorter term puts and calls will soon join their monthly expiration counterparts as mainstream trading instruments.

Just as the name implies, the newest innovation in option trading are derivatives that are issued on Thursdays, and then expire the following Friday six trading days later.

But why bother with short duration instruments when the traditional monthly expiries have been working fine for all these years? There are actually quite a few advantages these instruments boast that simply can't be said for the alternatives. Consider this: Weekly options inherently offer a greater Delta. That just means each of them are more responsive to changes in the underlying security's price during their lifespan than monthly options are.

Weekly options don't suffer from a high theta
In other words, time decay isn't a major impediment for weekly options. Since they're so short in duration, there's no excess time value (or premium) baked into the price. As a result, weekly options tend to cost less.

While those two details are the favorable technicalities, the overarching attraction to these new short term derivatives is not only bigger picture, but much more important than the high delta and low theta.... weekly options are amazingly flexible.

Learn specific techniques and strategies for trading Weekly Options
Free Weekly Options Training Kit - Click Here!

One of the more challenging drawbacks of trading traditional options has been the misalignment of a traders timeframe and the options lifespan.

For example, a trades sweet spot may end up spanning the last week of one month and the first week of the next month. However, since monthly options expire right before that sweet spot has occurred (and are issued several weeks before that period), a trader may be forced to choose an option, expiration, or strike price that doesn't fully maximize a trades potential.

Said another way, a lack of choices of when an options life begins and ends means the trade's theta and delta aren't ideal, leaving money on the table.

Weekly options, conversely, are new every week, so a trader can pick and choose to step into a trend that's moving at the time. Or, he or she can choose to pass on a trade that's stagnant at the time. And what happens when the underlying stock or index starts to move again? No problem,  just step in again with the next weekly issue. There's no need to waste time and tie up capital by holding an option during the underlying security's dead periods.

And what sorts of securities or indices currently offer these weekly options. All the usual suspects in terms of indices are available. Major indices like the S&P 500, and weekly options for some of the major sector ETFs are on the table as well. A few of the most highly-traded stocks are in the fray too. Since these are issued on a revolving basis at the discretion of the exchanges though (largely depending on demand), you never know which stock you may be able to play this way in the future. [Indeed, many traders have used them as a way to leverage a position for purely a one-time event, like an earnings announcement.]

While the advantages of trading weekly options are clear, a new set of trading mindsets and rules also apply:
Get your short term charts and ebb/flow predictions ready. One of the primary reasons equity and index options exist in their traditional time frames, with a lifespan of months if not more than a year, is to offer an active investor a way to leverage his or her capital, while allowing that same trader to ride out rough patches on the way to the end goal. Weekly options, on the other hand, are a short-term chartists dream. The key question is, where will this stock/index be in a week (or less)?

Use the market tide to your advantage. In the same vein is think short term, traders should tap the markets near term tidal forces since 3 out of 4 stocks tend to move in tandem with the markets strong moves. Yes, given enough time, the best individual stock trends can defy the market's ebb and low. The whole point here is speed though, which means calling the market right at any given time is half the battle (whether you?re trading stock or index options).

Keep the original intent in mind. It's contrary to most everything we?ve been taught as investors, but the whole point of weekly options is to reap the benefit from a short term move,  get in and out accordingly. Some traders are using them to profit from news announcements (like earnings). Others are just using them to hedge a position through a certain timeframe. Don't be afraid to cut loose once your reasonable objective has been met.

The proliferation of weekly option trading is sure to be a beneficial one for traders. Like any other trading arena though, it's the mastery of the nuances more than the mechanics that will be the key to your success.

Looking for More strategies on Weekly Options?
Learn how to make more trading Weekly Options - Click Here!




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Monday, October 4, 2010

Price Headley: Last Week's Action May be the Start of a Small Correction

The Crude Oil Trader would like to welcome our newest contributor Price Headley at BigTrends.com. Here is Price's weekly market report for Monday October 4th....

The four week win streak came to an end last week last week, though barely. Still, all pullbacks start with a small step, and last week's action may well be the beginning of at least a small correction. The dip came despite the much-improved economic news. Nearly all the data not only rolled in better than expected, but showed sustained improvements…. income, spending, sentiment (except for the Conference Board's consumer confidence), GDP, and most of the other data nuggets were pointed higher.

So why the pullback? It's all a matter of timeframes. In the long run, the good economic news should indeed translate into more bullishness for stocks. In the near-term (which is our primary focus from one week to the next), fear, greed, momentum, and excess movement drive the market for option trading. That's what we'll dissect below, after a closer look at the economy.

Economic Outlook
It was a plenty busy week last week on the economic front, with a rough start, but a strong finish. Though still improving, the rate of increase in home values, according the Case-Shiller index – slowed to a pace of 3.18% last month, versus the prior increase of 4.21%. Also on Tuesday, the Conference Board said consumer confidence slumped from 53.2 to 48.5 last month.

From Thursday on, however, it was nothing but good news.

Q2's GDP was revised upward, to 1.7%. Initial claims sank to near-multi-year-lows of 453K, while ongoing claims fell to 4457K… also approaching new multi year lows. The lines in the sand for each are 440K and 4430K, respectively. On Friday, the news got even more compelling. Incomes as well as spending were both up, and better than anticipated (by 0.5% and 0.4%, respectively). And, the prior week's problematic University of Michigan Sentiment number was revised upward, from 66.6 to 68.2.

How does the continued uptrend in incomes as well as spending last while both confidence measures sink? As we've said before, the confidence opinion polls are 'supposed to be' assessments about the next six months. In reality, they are assessments of the prior month. Moreover, in many ways they can be interpreted as contrarian indicators....meaning be bullish when they're most bearish, and vice versa.

Indeed, Friday's latter data confirmed that consumers aren't nearly as mired as they claim to be. Construction spending was up a tad, against the backdrop of an expected 1.4% contraction. And, though the final numbers aren't in yet, auto sales have remained strong this year – and in September – despite worries that things are going to get worse before they get better. It's all below.

Let's take a look at the charts for this coming week.....Price Headley's view for this week.

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