"BUY DLF 85 PUT @ .90 TGT 1.65/2.2"
The iron condor is an option strategy usually adopted by traders with some option trading experience. That is as it should be because managing these positions requires an understanding of how money is made and lost -- something that most novice traders are unaware that they have not yet learned.
The iron condor is an option strategy usually adopted by traders with some option trading experience. That is as it should be because managing these positions requires an understanding of how money is made and lost -- something that most novice traders are unaware that they have not yet learned.
Below
are some of my thoughts about trading iron condors.
Is trading iron condors the same as
gambling in the stock market?
·
If you
open a randomly chosen iron condor,
you are gambling. When choosing a specific iron condor, it is important to pay
attention to the underlying asset, the premium collected (i.e., the maximum
possible profit), the money at risk (position
size and worst possible loss), and your willingness to own a market-neutral position.
· If you open an iron condor, but have an edge -- perhaps the implied volatility is very high, or there is a good reason to believe that the underlying asset will not be too volatile during the lifetime of the options -- then you are not gambling. However, because you must pay commissions to own the investment, you need a significant edge to place the trade.
· If you open an iron condor based on a stock market prediction -- bullish, bearish, or neutral -- then you are gambling if your proven track record of predicting direction is poor. You are not gambling when you truly have a proven, successful, track record of predicting market direction. A 60/40 profit/loss record -- after commissions -- meets that need.
· If you open an iron condor, but have an edge -- perhaps the implied volatility is very high, or there is a good reason to believe that the underlying asset will not be too volatile during the lifetime of the options -- then you are not gambling. However, because you must pay commissions to own the investment, you need a significant edge to place the trade.
· If you open an iron condor based on a stock market prediction -- bullish, bearish, or neutral -- then you are gambling if your proven track record of predicting direction is poor. You are not gambling when you truly have a proven, successful, track record of predicting market direction. A 60/40 profit/loss record -- after commissions -- meets that need.