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subject: What Type Of Option Trader Are You? [print this page]


There are a few different types of option traders. Some option traders are very aggressive, and they can really be called day traders. This type of trader uses a lot of money, and they are in and out of trades all day long. Option traders that trade this way do not usually hold a position overnight. It's a very stressful way to trade and requires constant attention. I once had a conversation with a day trader who was working about 60 to 80 hours per week in order to successfully trade options this way. But I wonder how successful he really was. Because if he was making so much money, then why did he call me to learn a new way to trade options?

Option Trading : Steps to Success

Another type of option trader is one that trades for income but is not sitting in front of the computer all day long. There are different types of strategies that an option trader can utilize to trade like this. One of the more popular strategies is called a Credit Spread. Some people do Credit Spreads on stocks and others do Credit Spreads on the Indices. Either way you do Credit Spreads, they are still very risky. Credit Spreads cannot handle the large debacles that constantly occur in the stock market.

Those were the two more common styles of option traders. However, there is a less common strategy out there where traders trade over earnings reports. This is a very exciting way to trade options and it can actually be very rewarding. The excitement comes from the amount of risk and luck that come into play when you trade this way. Back testing is a good way to help predict what might happen over earnings, but there is still a long on uncertainty involved in this style of trading.

These styles clearly involve a lot of risk. There is another type of option trader who is managing his savings account and prefers a less risky way of trading than the previous 2 styles. A trader looking to avoid some risk will trade strategies known as the Broken Wing Butterfly and the Unbalanced Condor. These two strategies are two of the lowest risk strategies that can be found in option trades. They allow an option trader to construct trades that have low risk from the start, normally only one to two percent risk is theoretically taken on a given trade.

San Jose Options offers a course focused on the low-risk type of option strategies mentioned above. While some options mentoring courses are slowly starting to catch on, San Jose Options has been training students on these strategies for many years. They specialize in the Broken Wing Butterfly and Unbalanced Condors. Their course is designed for those who are retired and those who wish to invest with options without risking as much as the usual option trader does. If you would like to learn safer option strategies, then I highly recommend that you check out their options mentoring program.

by: Donald Scott




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