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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Upper Saddle River, NJ : FTPress Delivers
    ISBN: 9780132842600 , 0132842602
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (1 v.) , ill.
    Keywords: Options (Finance) ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: The basic option strategy known as a "collar" has achieved some degree of popularity in recent years. Investors generally use it in a simple fashion. They own a stock. Stock rallies. They want to lock in some gain but still participate in more upside. So they slap on a simple collar. Generally, that involves buying a modestly OTM put and shorting a modestly OTM call in quantities exactly equal to the stock they already own. And generally at prices such that the premium received on the call "pays for" the put. And that's it. But there's so much more. In this short piece, the author expands on this basic option trading strategy. How about playing with the ratios of the options to the stock? Or to themselves? How about we do everything in reverse: Short the stock and protect it with long OTM calls....and "pay for" those calls with short OTM puts? How do you manage any of these positions? What is the cost of capital on all of this? The author covers all of these possibilities.
    Note: "FT Press delivers insights for the agile investor on options"--Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Upper Saddle River, N.J. : FT Press Delivers
    ISBN: 9780132842839 , 0132842831
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (1 v.) , ill.
    Series Statement: Insights for the agile investor
    Keywords: Options (Finance) ; Investments ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: A backspread is an option spread in which a trader carries a short position in one option series and a greater quantity of long position in another option series. The backspread gives you a two-pronged bet. Since you typically structure them to yield a credit, you win small if the entire trade goes worthless. You also have extra long puts on a put backspread, and extra long calls on a call backspread, so you potentially win big if the underlying stock moves sharply beyond your strike prices. That sounds fantastic, like getting paid to buy a lottery ticket. Alas, you face risks, too. You lose if the underlying stock hovers near the strike price you own or if implied volatility of the options declines while the stock moves into unfavorable territory. Even so, backspreads provide excellent risk/reward characteristics if you want to bet on a move in the underlying stock. In this Investing Short, Adam Warner shows you how.
    Note: Cover title. - "Minyanville."
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Upper Saddle River, N.J. : FTPress Delivers
    ISBN: 9780132946629 , 0132946629
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource ([26] p.) , ill.
    Keywords: Exchange traded funds ; Hedging (Finance) ; Financial futures ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: Volatility is one of the defining characteristics of today's global markets. As a result, many traders are seeking better ways to profit from their bets on shifting volatility. Once, the primary way to trade volatility was to buy and sell standard calls and puts. Then, the world discovered VIX, the so-called "Fear Index." Next, the CBOE devised ways to trade the VIX: first VIX futures, and then VIX options. Unfortunately, not everyone can trade futures; hence, the latest of innovations derived from ETFs are volatility-based Exchange Traded Notes (ETNs): first VXX, then VXZ, and now more than two dozen additional competitors. These debt instruments can be excellent trading and hedging vehicles, but they don't perfectly track the VIX. As a result, it's tricky to use them reliably, and many traders who've experimented with them have suffered significant losses. In Trading Volatility ETFs , Adam Warner explains the structures of VXX and VXZ, reveals how they've worked in the past, and projects their behavior in different market environments. He systematically demystifies their subtleties, explains who should and shouldn't use them, and describes how they can best be applied in effective hedging and trading.
    Note: Cover title
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