Posts Tagged analysis

Online Investing

Are you attracted to the idea of being in control of your financial future, but confused about how to start investing in the stock or share market, while avoiding costly mistakes?

Or maybe you\’re disappointed with your performance so far?

Does it sometimes feel like every time you take the plunge and buy into the market, the price goes down?

That\’s understandable…

You\’ve probably attended seminars, read other newsletters or broker reports telling you to buy this or buy that ….. you\’ve probably heard or read a lot of confusing and sometimes conflicting information?

The real surprising facts are that very few online investors actually make money long term.

You\’ve worked hard in your life to get your investment nest egg together so far – but now where to from here?

Maybe you want to develop some extra income or even manage your own superannuation retirement fund? For instance, from 1 July 2005, as a result of new rules on ?choice of superannuation fund?, for the first time millions more Australian employees will be able to choose a fund for their future superannuation guarantee contributions.

Maybe you\’re attracted to the charts you\’ve seen showing the power of compounding investments

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Options Trading Made Easy – Learn How To Profit

If you’re trading stocks or bonds, there are a whole range of strategies you can follow, which range from the long term buy and hold, right through to day trading using technical analysis. Options trading is very similar.

Understanding exactly what an option is one of the trickiest things to understand when you’re starting out. Basically, an option is a contract that gives you the right to buy (a call option) or sell (a put option) a stock or bond at a set price (the strike price) on or prior to a set date (the expiration date). You might need to read that a few times to get the hang of it!

There are different types of options available in the marketplace, with ‘American’ options able to be exercised anytime between purchase and expiration, and ‘European’ options only able to be exercised on the expiry date. Although the terms are geographical, nowadays the location where you buy options doesn’t automatically mean you’ve bought one type or the other. As a general rule of them, American-style options are mostly used for stocks and bonds, whereas European-style options are for indexes.

Officially, options expire on the Saturday after the third Friday of the expiry month of the contract. However as US markets are shut on Saturdays, that makes the Friday the effective expiry day. Talk about confusing!

Now that you have a basic understanding of what an option is and how it works, let’s take a look at some basic strategies. I’ll just focus on American-style options for stocks.

When you buy or sell an option, you basically have two choices – you can hold it to maturity, or you can choose to exercise it prior to expiry. A large proportion of investors do hold their options until maturity before exercising it to trade the underlying asset. Let’s look at an example.

You’ve purchased a call option for $1, with a strike price of $25. As options contracts are generally for 100 share lots, your purchase (ignoring commissions) would cost you $100, and you’d have the right to purchase $2500 of stock through the option. Now, if the expiry date arrives and the stock is worth $27, it makes sense to go ahead of buy the stock, because you only have to pay $25. That means you’ve made an immediate profit of $2 per share if you sell them again immediately on the stock market. However you still have to factor in what you paid to buy the option, which was $1 a share. So after your purchase costs are deducted, your overall profit is $1 a share. Well done!

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The Secret Art Of Backtesting

If you have not back tested your trading system, you might as well trade with your eyes close.

In fact, whatever technical analysis criterion you use to trade with, be it moving averages, candle sticks, volatility breakouts, fibonacci retracements or any other trading system you have devised you\’re going to need to back test your trading system thoroughly and objectively in order to remove any possible doubt about it\’s capability.

To remove any self-doubt you need to thoroughly back test or simulate your trading system in such away that it matches the conditions under which it will be traded. Once you have established that you have a reliable and robust trading system only then will you be confident in trading your system.

When trading what is the question in most traders

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