Thursday, May 29, 2008

Strangle Option Trading

Definition: A long short Strangle is the purchase sale of an out of the money Put and an OTM Call on the same underlying stock with the same time to expiration.
With XYZ stock trading at $50, an example of a long Strangle would be the purchase of the XYZ July 45 Put and the July 55 Call. If the Call is trading for $1.25, the Put for $.90 and we bought 10 Strangles, the total cost excluding commissions would be $2,150. Of course, if we sold the Strangles, we would receive a credit for that same amount coming into our account. Like the Straddles, long Strangles must be paid for in full;they cannot be bought on margin. Short Strangles have margin requirements.View option chart.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

financial stocks

Over the last week there has been a deterioration in equities which is showing up in many financial stocks. Bank of America Corporation (NYSE:BAC) broke out of a symmetrical triangle, JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM) is still trading in large broadening formation, and Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C) has failed to hold its downtrend break.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

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Thursday, May 08, 2008

Forex Trading System

Guide Shows The Trades Are Done With Real Money And Arent Simulations Like Every Other Forex Guide. For the past 5 years I have made my living trading in the currency markets. I am nothing special whatsoever. I didn't go to elite private schools all my life. I didn't get a Finance or Economics degree from Harvard Business School. If I can make a living doing this.... I SWEAR TO YOU, ANYONE CAN!
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Sunday, May 04, 2008

Support and Resistance Chart


Price and Time: Price spends the least amount of time at price levels where supply and demand are out of balance. Price spends the most amount of time at price levels where supply and demand are NOT that out of balance.
In other words, price levels on a chart where price spends the LEAST amount of time are where the most quality trading opportunities are found. What this picture looks like on a chart is a pivot high and a pivot low, NOT a cluster of trading activity. Let's have a look,
Notice the turning points on this stock chart. If you focus on the pivot high point in the upper left portion of the chart, that provides for solid resistance when price returns to it on the 29th. That is a quality supply level. Notice the demand (support) level on the bottom of the chart, the pivot low on the 29th. Price shoots up from that level because supply and demand are so out of balance. Price spends so little time there because demand greatly exceeds supply. When price revisits that area two days later, that is the time to buy as price is revisiting a quality demand level. Next, notice the circled cluster of trading from the 28th. Price declines from that area and when it returns to that level, it moves right through it like a hot knife through butter. This is because supply and demand are not that out of balance, the cluster of trading tells us so. The fact that price spent more time in that base than it did at those pivot high and low points tells us that the great supply and demand imbalance is at the pivots, not the cluster of trading. While I may show these clusters in letters, they are for understanding. For application of support and resistance, pivot highs and lows are where the greatest imbalances are found.Stock Forum