✅ New to options trading? Master the essential options trading concepts with the FREE Options Trading for Beginners PDF and email course: geni.us/options-trading-pdf As always, let me know if you have any questions about the video. -Chris
Hi Chris, I saw in a video where you said there was a template sheet for logging all trades made in the description section and it could be downloaded, I can't find that video, could you add a link please? cheers
Hey chris, can u make a video comparing returns and losses of at the money, out of the money and in the money options in the same expiration cycle of the same stock so we can compare which is better assuming the risk is same that is delta is same..
How much risk do u like to trade in, in terms delta.. I mean at which delta do u like to trade?. And what the realist return one can expect trading option if we trade for delta less than or equal to 0.3
My biggest problem over the years when buying options (primarily Calls) is "timing". i.e. having option expire before stock moves. By using LEAPS with high Delta (deep in the money) I've become a lot more profitable.
I started trading LEAPS last year. It's just so much easier not worry about the day to day while still leveraging options. Great video! I learned a bit more :)
Assuming you're bullish u do a leap call option. I'm thinking the same but long a synthetic spread with a protective put. The P/L chart will be similar to just a long leap option but cheaper. What do u think?
You are an excellent teacher. This is the 3rd option video I've watched and you are very thorough and systematic. Thank you so much for sharing this content with us. Much respect!
Hey Chris, your videos are outstanding! Clear, thorough and applicable...I'm primarily buying LEAPs now and wanted to ask 2 questions...1. Do you have a recommended profit goal for when you might sell to close LEAPs and 2. What are the pros and cons associated with buying LEAPs on leveraged ETFs? Thank you for all you do, sir!
This was extremely informative. I was thinking of doing leaps on a particular stock and now have a much better understanding of how it works. Thank you.
Explaining is one thing - as in how to do it. More important though is WHY. What is the purpose of using LEAPS - when does it work well and when is it a bad choice. For example, I know how to initiate an Iron Condor (not saying I could even do it better than anyone but I can follow step by step). Why? That is always the big moment - "Oh, so that's why it works so well!" Thanks for your help and advice.
Idea: if i'm very bullish on the longterm, buy a leap, while selling a long-term put. Use the put premium to lower cost of buying the call, and lower my break-even price. I'm sure I'm not the first person to consider this combination. lol Thx for your content.
I never sell puts because the market could move down and you get assigned. It's uncommon in American style contracts, but I have had it happen twice in the last several years. The spy is weird because it is so volatile. I would bet because of its volumes that it is actually more volatile than a lot of stocks. Of course you could buy the put and take the loss and hang on to the call in the hopes that things turn around. Then you are just straight long, and it's never easy to make a profit, especially now you need more to cover for the put. I just think there is a decent risk of early assignment on spiders. Well, gl!
Absolutely love this channel!!! Best on TH-cam hands down!! I have some leaps on Square, the latest one reads...as of 10\14\2020 SQ 20 JAN 2023 ITM Trade price 100.00 Bid size6 114.05 ASK size60 118.20 Delta: 91.54 Gamma0.0904 Theta-1.65015 Vega: 43.3587 Net liq.11,607.50 P\L Day -425.00 P\L Open 1,601.84 Ill give updates on how its doing as time goes on Thanks again for the great videos.
Loved this but wish you would of went deep into the mechanism by which the 600 percent gain was effected through the Greeks as the underlying increased
Great channel to learn options with so much detail explanations. You are doing great, I recommended your channel to all people interested to learn options. I am a bit puzzled that why deep in the money Leap call options have very little extrinsic value. This make it much less risky strategy. Can you please comment?
Hi, where can I learn more, I don’t understand if in a “range trading market” or up and down and up and down market, how does it affect the leaps options ? This is when u are correct 100% in the direction where the market is going, at this point, we don’t even know this is a slowly climbing up, or there is more pain to gain, but for sure a year or two from now things will be cheaper than it is today ( hopefully )
In your example, the leap you purchased was deep out of the money. You then hypothetically held it until it was at the money. That seems like a pretty unrealistic scenario - more like gambling. You lost 100% of your money if the market had gone down, stayed the same, or even went higher. You only made money if you were lucky enough to buy SPY at the bottom and it moved substantially higher.
^^^ THIS. This is the issue that options furus routinely gloss over, by showing you an "example" where everything works in your favor for most or the whole trade. Reality is different. I can tell you, being stuck "underwater" in LEAPS myself right now. It will take MONTHS for them to recover - if they ever do. The weird thing is that my LEAPS trades worked well and just like TH-cam options furus promised. Until they didn't.
Hi Chris - is there a relationship between Delta and IV? I have noticed that my profit projection using delta, once the stock moves up, are much lower that the theoretical (price increase*delta) projection that i have been doing. Hence I assume IV has a lot to do with the gap. I would appreciate your thoughts
great video chris! It’s interesting to see how with LEAPS delta drives the change in the option price. The time period is too far out to prevent significant theta decay. and with something like SPY as an underlying, over a long period of time, IV should average out to be fairly low as the price generally grinds up, lowering the effect of Vega decay 🤔
Thanks for the video. How do I know if the IV for a leap contract is high or low? I want to avoid IV crushing after I buy a leap so how would I know not to overpay due to IV?
If you go long, it's pointless to buy IV. IV is equal on a call to the stock price minus the strike price. There's no benefit to buy an itm option, because all the IV can do is go to zero. The TV will definitely go to zero, but if the stock retraces, and your itm goes otm, how did the extra cost help you? It's a waste.
Hey Chris I really love your chanel. I think you made mistake explaining IV on January 2020 calls for SPY it should be Jan 2022?!?!? It is around 15min's of video. Can you clarify that if it is not mistake then I'm lost lol.
Can we get a study done on the optimal trade management strategy for LEAPS? Similar to what you did for the CSP puts on SPY. This could be a MAJOR help!
Thanks for watching! Technically, IV always matters. But what we observe when looking at LEAPS is that IV changes much smaller than short-term IV, meaning IV is much more stable for longer-term options. If you look at a long call LEAP from the bottom of 2020 to a few months later, you'll see the huge VIX/IV crash didn't matter for the long-term calls. Some people will say that longer-term options have higher IV sensitivity since they have higher vega, but the thing is the longer-term IVs don't move nearly as much as short-term IVs, so the larger vega is misleading on its own.
Hey Chris, I’m 15 and I’m trying to learn as much about finance in general as I can but more specifically options trading and value investing. Do you have any tips or suggestions of what else I should learn before I start investing for myself?
The way I would do it I will check on the option Chain what is the expected move and try to get a strike around there . If you’re extremely certain it will hit or your budget allows then move the strike further OTM on the short option.
Over the last week, I've been allocating some of my capital into Deep In the Money Calls in NEM, GDX and AEM expiring Jan'23 with very little Time Value (Delta >95).
Thank you for this video. Question: since the 2-year LEAP has so much time to expiration, is it a correct understanding that you have more time for the underlying to move in your favor. In the example with the SPY 300C 2 years out, even though we are OTM 1 month from the bottom, the option still has value. Would it be hard to sell given that it is a 2-year LEAP with low volume and open interest? If you had bought a shorter DTE options say 3 months or 6-months, it will have a higher time decay, but generally, it will have a higher reward to risk ratio given that it probably would have been cheaper than the 2-year, is that correct?
Generally speaking -- an option at the same strike and a shorter time frame will have a larger % increase given the same move. But by going to a shorter time frame, it becomes more of a gamble because you NEED to be right, and fast. And about selling the option, it wouldn't be hard, but you would have to likely sell lower than the mid-price (same with buying -- you'll usually buy higher than mid). But in SPY, the options are pretty active even that far out. There's a large enough of a market to make it happen. I wouldn't worry too much about getting in/out in liquid stocks, which is why I mentioned to only do this type of trade in popular products.
What is weird about TV is that there is always more on a more distant expiration, but it's not proportionate. A 2 year leap might have $6 if it's otm, but a 2 month contract might have $2 for the same otm strike. $6/24 months < $2/2 months. The time value is disproportionately front loaded, back months get cheaper because otm options demand the stock to hit a home run in the 9th. Very rare. But shorter term contracts are the same because in the last week the contract's TV takes a sudden nose dive. TV is not a linear progression where week 1 TV = any other week during the same contract. So if you are going long, you would do well to buy in the back months to save money and have the best chance to see that massive move that you will undoubtedly need.
Chris, can I substitute my leap call option with a long synthetic call spread with a protective put? Ie 3 legged strategy: Buy a leap call option, sell a leap put option at the same strike & expiration, buy a put option at a lower strike but same expiration. The P/L chart is somewhat the same profile but results in a smaller net debit prem. What are your thoughts?
OK, don't keep through expiration since it will get exercise and you will have to buy the stock at the price of your leaps, second, theta decay really ramp up in the last 3 month, so you should sell before that unless you expect a huge up turn during that time. Hope that helped.
One Question. I did bit of research on SPY ( 24 Oct 2020 - 12 Oct 2020 ) when SPY grew 10.71% up. There random LEAP options grew like these (SPY220916C350 - 31% ) ( SPY221216C350 - 60% ) ( SPY230120C350 - 63% ). Now I know the growth is 3x, 6x, 6x but in your example the growth was around 18x. We are looking at similar strike price differences, similar timeframe ( 2 year ) then why there is the difference? Please enlighten. Will appreciate your response.
Do you have such a huge gain of 600% only when you buy existing option (being on market for a while and out of money)? Because in my experience with leaps if you buy new puts at money you would not get nearly as much.
Sup Chris -- Sounds all good but lets say you have a long ITM 2+ year LEAP call but underlying is reporting earnings soon (and you dont want to sell due to taxes or whatever) -- how do you avoid IV crush-- IV affects only extrinsic value which is greater on leaps then shorter term options- Maybe sell a call -- and which strike (right above or above what the expected move would be?
It's really a great lecture. I'm new to options trading, just wondering @8:04 you mentioned that for a 1 dollar change in the SPY price, we would get 50 dollars. Is n't it supposed to be 50 cents for 1 dollar increment in the price?
A $0.50 change in the option price means a $50 change in your P/L, since a $0.50 change in the option price really represents a $50 change in the option's premium. So I just skipped a step and said a 1 dollar change in SPY would result in a $50 change in P/L.
Hello, would this be a useful tool to make long-term bets on stocks or other underlying securities that you believe will move substantially in your favor -but you are not sure of the time frame, it could be 6 months, 1 year, 2 years or even beyond, would you still look to make the option inexpensive by looking at OTM options with 25-40 delta for example as oppose to Deep ITM LEAPs? Thoughts?
Yes, I personally do. I think the time frame you choose is up to you. If I think the move will happen in 6-12 months, then I'd go 2 years out to give myself time. I think you can always safely go further out, even if you think the move will be a few weeks, but by going further out you'll pay a higher premium for the option (assuming same strike). But the added time is a safety net in case you're wrong.
I wouldn't call them a store of value, but they are much better positions to allocate money to than short-term options. I will be allocating money to 2+ year call options in stocks that I want lots of exposure to in the future. The long call LEAPS strategy is one of my most believed-in approaches. But admittedly, I have none of these positions on right now as the market is pretty insane with the increases we've already seen over the past few months. I had many profitable long-term call positions that I've already exited for healthy profits.
You're welcome! I just spent a ton of time creating an Options Trading for Beginners PDF (170+ pages now) that includes my best explanations/visuals explaining key options trading concepts and strategies. Check it out: www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/g7d402wnapqexq344ct73/options-trading-for-beginners-aug15-v1.pdf?rlkey=dort61xyaz1rubndbwbqmhd5i&dl=0 If you want updates to the PDF over the coming months/additional learning resources, consider dropping your email on the page here: geni.us/options-trading-pdf
Hi, I really liked your explaining Leap options and how they magnify returns. I was looking at a video by a channel called “James Bulltard” and he describes Leap options he recently placed on Amazon. I’m not sure if his video is legit or if it’s not to be trusted. Would you mind taking a look at that video (his most recent one!) and let me know if it “looks good” or if you think it’s not a real trade / a suspect video. It’s hard to know who is for real on TH-cam, but I trust you. Thanks! 🙏🏼😊 Coco
I buy the furthest leaps ITM calls and consider them as long term assets. Of course I also sell short term calls against it. Can you make a video about more detail in rolling the long call forward? For example, do I change the strike? Do I use the same delta? Do I always roll every year or every quarter when the new leaps comes out? Should I roll for debit or credit? More importantly, how do I compare and what standard should I use to make decision between different decisions in rolling leaps forward?
Does tastyworks allow EU Citizen to open accounts? I tried ToS, WeBull and Robinhood, but none allowed me to open accounts, I'm currently trying SaxoBank and IB but I'm not really happy with either
it represents that you are paying an upfront cost to be able to buy 100shares times the amount of contracts at 300 dollars a share by that date. however we are not going to actually buy them with this strategy we are paying the upfront cost for that right and then selling that right to someone else for more than we bought it
I was looking to some of the stocks and they have open interest about 16k 28k for the particular price that I was interested in so I'm guessing that's pretty good strike price
Thanks man. How can I send you some money. I really appreciate what you’re doing. Do you have a tshirt or any merch that I can buy to help you out. I’ve watched a ton of your videos
I have a question maybe you can help with. I am currently in the situation where I want to exercise call options because of the potential dividends. But I don’t have all the cash to exercise all my contracts. What’s my best option to exercise all and can I use margin in my favor to exercise contracts.. basically creating a loop Exercise contract with cash, use stock equity margin to exercise more contracts / I’m thinking once I buy the stocks the equity also increases therefore I have more margin?
gold and silver coming correction, possibly 10 to 20 percent. should we close our otm gold silver leaps, and then buy them again at a lower price, or shall we hang on? Aug20
At around 12:15, you mention "taking the options off." What does that mean? Don't you need to hold until the contract expires? How do you get out "early"?
@@projectfinance sorry, I'm new to this. So, could you theoretically buy an option and then sell covered calls against it? Thank you so much for your response!
✅ New to options trading? Master the essential options trading concepts with the FREE Options Trading for Beginners PDF and email course: geni.us/options-trading-pdf
As always, let me know if you have any questions about the video.
-Chris
Hi Chris, I saw in a video where you said there was a template sheet for logging all trades made in the description section and it could be downloaded, I can't find that video, could you add a link please? cheers
th-cam.com/video/SMXLR1UC4ug/w-d-xo.html
@@projectfinance Cheers Chris
Hey chris, can u make a video comparing returns and losses of at the money, out of the money and in the money options in the same expiration cycle of the same stock so we can compare which is better assuming the risk is same that is delta is same..
How much risk do u like to trade in, in terms delta.. I mean at which delta do u like to trade?. And what the realist return one can expect trading option if we trade for delta less than or equal to 0.3
My biggest problem over the years when buying options (primarily Calls) is "timing". i.e. having option expire before stock moves. By using LEAPS with high Delta (deep in the money) I've become a lot more profitable.
💸💸💸
Yes, I always buy deep in the money to make it the most profitable.
Also time decay. Options premium decay faster when they are close to expiration.
What stock do you trade usually. I want to learn
That's what Pelosi does 😂.
Deep in the money leaps.
I started trading LEAPS last year. It's just so much easier not worry about the day to day while still leveraging options. Great video! I learned a bit more :)
Assuming you're bullish u do a leap call option. I'm thinking the same but long a synthetic spread with a protective put. The P/L chart will be similar to just a long leap option but cheaper. What do u think?
Synthetic spread, please elaborate @@JK-vb9ps
Best channel to learn Options trading! Great job man
I appreciate that!
Hands down.
You are an excellent teacher. This is the 3rd option video I've watched and you are very thorough and systematic. Thank you so much for sharing this content with us. Much respect!
Hey Chris, your videos are outstanding! Clear, thorough and applicable...I'm primarily buying LEAPs now and wanted to ask 2 questions...1. Do you have a recommended profit goal for when you might sell to close LEAPs and 2. What are the pros and cons associated with buying LEAPs on leveraged ETFs? Thank you for all you do, sir!
This was extremely informative. I was thinking of doing leaps on a particular stock and now have a much better understanding of how it works. Thank you.
Explaining is one thing - as in how to do it. More important though is WHY. What is the purpose of using LEAPS - when does it work well and when is it a bad choice. For example, I know how to initiate an Iron Condor (not saying I could even do it better than anyone but I can follow step by step). Why? That is always the big moment - "Oh, so that's why it works so well!" Thanks for your help and advice.
Idea: if i'm very bullish on the longterm, buy a leap, while selling a long-term put. Use the put premium to lower cost of buying the call, and lower my break-even price. I'm sure I'm not the first person to consider this combination. lol Thx for your content.
I never sell puts because the market could move down and you get assigned. It's uncommon in American style contracts, but I have had it happen twice in the last several years. The spy is weird because it is so volatile. I would bet because of its volumes that it is actually more volatile than a lot of stocks. Of course you could buy the put and take the loss and hang on to the call in the hopes that things turn around. Then you are just straight long, and it's never easy to make a profit, especially now you need more to cover for the put. I just think there is a decent risk of early assignment on spiders. Well, gl!
I was lucky enough to buy XLE 2022 leaps right when it bottomed in mid March. So glad I did, now that the market is recovering.
These are my type of options! Could you do a LEAPS strategy?
I'll come up with something!
@@projectfinance 🤜🤛 champion. Thank you!
@@projectfinance Any update on this? Love your channel btw man!
It feels like you made this video for me :D
Excellent explanation as always. Thanks!
Haha I might have. Thanks for watching/commenting as always!
Hi Chris, which strike to use, ATM, ITM or OTM?
Absolutely love this channel!!! Best on TH-cam hands down!!
I have some leaps on Square, the latest one reads...as of 10\14\2020
SQ 20 JAN 2023 ITM
Trade price 100.00 Bid size6 114.05 ASK size60 118.20
Delta: 91.54 Gamma0.0904
Theta-1.65015 Vega: 43.3587
Net liq.11,607.50 P\L Day -425.00
P\L Open 1,601.84
Ill give updates on how its doing as time goes on
Thanks again for the great videos.
nice work
How is it going?
this really cleared up a lot of confusion I had about the greeks, thanks!
is vertical spread good for leap options? example please
Loved this but wish you would of went deep into the mechanism by which the 600 percent gain was effected through the Greeks as the underlying increased
Great channel to learn options with so much detail explanations. You are doing great, I recommended your channel to all people interested to learn options.
I am a bit puzzled that why deep in the money Leap call options have very little extrinsic value. This make it much less risky strategy. Can you please comment?
Hi, where can I learn more, I don’t understand if in a “range trading market” or up and down and up and down market, how does it affect the leaps options ? This is when u are correct 100% in the direction where the market is going, at this point, we don’t even know this is a slowly climbing up, or there is more pain to gain, but for sure a year or two from now things will be cheaper than it is today ( hopefully )
When buying long term options, would you recommend buying in the money or out of the money options (especially DOTMs)?
Great Video. One quick question: When you go for say LEAP Call option, do you buy ATM ?
Solid video Chris. Learning "LEAPS" and bounds on both channels.
Amazing haha! I’m glad to hear it. Much more to come.
In your example, the leap you purchased was deep out of the money. You then hypothetically held it until it was at the money. That seems like a pretty unrealistic scenario - more like gambling. You lost 100% of your money if the market had gone down, stayed the same, or even went higher. You only made money if you were lucky enough to buy SPY at the bottom and it moved substantially higher.
^^^ THIS.
This is the issue that options furus routinely gloss over, by showing you an "example" where everything works in your favor for most or the whole trade. Reality is different. I can tell you, being stuck "underwater" in LEAPS myself right now. It will take MONTHS for them to recover - if they ever do.
The weird thing is that my LEAPS trades worked well and just like TH-cam options furus promised. Until they didn't.
Hi Chris - is there a relationship between Delta and IV? I have noticed that my profit projection using delta, once the stock moves up, are much lower that the theoretical (price increase*delta) projection that i have been doing. Hence I assume IV has a lot to do with the gap. I would appreciate your thoughts
great video chris! It’s interesting to see how with LEAPS delta drives the change in the option price.
The time period is too far out to prevent significant theta decay. and with something like SPY as an underlying, over a long period of time, IV should average out to be fairly low as the price generally grinds up, lowering the effect of Vega decay 🤔
Thanks for watching/commenting!
Thanks for the video. How do I know if the IV for a leap contract is high or low? I want to avoid IV crushing after I buy a leap so how would I know not to overpay due to IV?
Compare it to realised vol... for SPY you can also check the VIX chart to have an idea of how high or low is the IV compared to its past values
If you go long, it's pointless to buy IV. IV is equal on a call to the stock price minus the strike price. There's no benefit to buy an itm option, because all the IV can do is go to zero. The TV will definitely go to zero, but if the stock retraces, and your itm goes otm, how did the extra cost help you? It's a waste.
I just loooooove the way you teach us! Thank you 🙏🏼
Hey Chris
I really love your chanel. I think you made mistake explaining IV on January 2020 calls for SPY it should be Jan 2022?!?!? It is around 15min's of video.
Can you clarify that if it is not mistake then I'm lost lol.
Yes! Jan 2022 is what I meant. Yikes!
Very good info. Would you recommend using the debit spread for LEAPS (or even for a shorter time trade), why/why not? thx.
No. The stock has to have a major upward move beyond the short call on top. You need to fill the gap between the two strikes to make a profit.
Can we get a study done on the optimal trade management strategy for LEAPS? Similar to what you did for the CSP puts on SPY. This could be a MAJOR help!
Hey what is the maximum time you have held a leap call to make a decent profit? Thanks
What about buying a put for long term downside. Is that a strategy with leaps as well,
Yes. A Leap is a directional move. If you think it’s going up but a long call. If you think it is going down buy a put.
Will definitely be checking out your other channel I have learned so much from your videos... Great content thank you!
Awesome, thank you! Glad to have you as a subscriber on both channels!
I really wish this video was posted around March ending to April 1 week time frame. Good video
Hi, thx for the video. Quick question: Does IV matter for LEAPS?
Thanks for watching! Technically, IV always matters. But what we observe when looking at LEAPS is that IV changes much smaller than short-term IV, meaning IV is much more stable for longer-term options. If you look at a long call LEAP from the bottom of 2020 to a few months later, you'll see the huge VIX/IV crash didn't matter for the long-term calls.
Some people will say that longer-term options have higher IV sensitivity since they have higher vega, but the thing is the longer-term IVs don't move nearly as much as short-term IVs, so the larger vega is misleading on its own.
Where can I buy leaps? Robinhood?
Hey Chris, I’m 15 and I’m trying to learn as much about finance in general as I can but more specifically options trading and value investing. Do you have any tips or suggestions of what else I should learn before I start investing for myself?
Will watch later. Thanks. Looking for pricing on leap.
what about a LEAP bull call spread? How would you choose the short leg?
Thanks
The way I would do it I will check on the option Chain what is the expected move and try to get a strike around there . If you’re extremely certain it will hit or your budget allows then move the strike further OTM on the short option.
Great video, as always you are spot on! What is the optimal moment to fix the profit?
That $4 Jan 22 300 call trading at $124 for a 3000% gain as of June 21
Chris, good video. Just adjust the light in front that reflects on yr spectacles...
I'm working on figuring it all out! thanks for watching.
I have been trading short-term options and have a set of rules for entry, what indicators do you use for leaps?
What strike price do I choose, something close to current stock price?
due diligence answers that
Some gurus (or teachers) say cash secured puts for LEAPS. Why long covered “calls” versus “puts”??? Confused
Over the last week, I've been allocating some of my capital into Deep In the Money Calls in NEM, GDX and AEM expiring Jan'23 with very little Time Value (Delta >95).
what do you think of futures compared to leaps?
You’re always professional and thorough with your videos! Keep up the great work and I’m sure your portfolio is BANGIN!
How would you apply this if you are selling calls or puts
what is your opinion on a put leap for SPY and a Call leap for FAZ ?
Great Video! Got a quick question. Do you recommend vertical spreads on leaps in case you can't afford to buy calls for certain stocks like AMZN?
As always, thank you, thank you, thank you!
what about doing spreads on these leaps?
Excellent presentation, Chris. I only wish I'd seen this when you published it 18 months ago.
Thank you for this video.
Question: since the 2-year LEAP has so much time to expiration, is it a correct understanding that you have more time for the underlying to move in your favor. In the example with the SPY 300C 2 years out, even though we are OTM 1 month from the bottom, the option still has value. Would it be hard to sell given that it is a 2-year LEAP with low volume and open interest? If you had bought a shorter DTE options say 3 months or 6-months, it will have a higher time decay, but generally, it will have a higher reward to risk ratio given that it probably would have been cheaper than the 2-year, is that correct?
Generally speaking -- an option at the same strike and a shorter time frame will have a larger % increase given the same move. But by going to a shorter time frame, it becomes more of a gamble because you NEED to be right, and fast. And about selling the option, it wouldn't be hard, but you would have to likely sell lower than the mid-price (same with buying -- you'll usually buy higher than mid). But in SPY, the options are pretty active even that far out. There's a large enough of a market to make it happen. I wouldn't worry too much about getting in/out in liquid stocks, which is why I mentioned to only do this type of trade in popular products.
Great answer.
What is weird about TV is that there is always more on a more distant expiration, but it's not proportionate. A 2 year leap might have $6 if it's otm, but a 2 month contract might have $2 for the same otm strike. $6/24 months < $2/2 months. The time value is disproportionately front loaded, back months get cheaper because otm options demand the stock to hit a home run in the 9th. Very rare. But shorter term contracts are the same because in the last week the contract's TV takes a sudden nose dive. TV is not a linear progression where week 1 TV = any other week during the same contract. So if you are going long, you would do well to buy in the back months to save money and have the best chance to see that massive move that you will undoubtedly need.
Chris, can I substitute my leap call option with a long synthetic call spread with a protective put? Ie 3 legged strategy: Buy a leap call option, sell a leap put option at the same strike & expiration, buy a put option at a lower strike but same expiration.
The P/L chart is somewhat the same profile but results in a smaller net debit prem.
What are your thoughts?
Interesting ideal
Hey man. What about low strike prices ? I love doing that.
If there is no interest can’t we just buy the stock (exercise) them and then sell the stock?
Ty very much for the video. I bought a leap in a stock I would like to own. Is it best to keep through exp? I’m obviously very bullish on this stock
OK, don't keep through expiration since it will get exercise and you will have to buy the stock at the price of your leaps, second, theta decay really ramp up in the last 3 month, so you should sell before that unless you expect a huge up turn during that time. Hope that helped.
Excellent video, thanks!
You’re welcome thanks for watching!
One Question. I did bit of research on SPY ( 24 Oct 2020 - 12 Oct 2020 ) when SPY grew 10.71% up. There random LEAP options grew like these (SPY220916C350 - 31% ) ( SPY221216C350 - 60% ) ( SPY230120C350 - 63% ). Now I know the growth is 3x, 6x, 6x but in your example the growth was around 18x. We are looking at similar strike price differences, similar timeframe ( 2 year ) then why there is the difference? Please enlighten. Will appreciate your response.
Do you have such a huge gain of 600% only when you buy existing option (being on market for a while and out of money)? Because in my experience with leaps if you buy new puts at money you would not get nearly as much.
Thank you for your videos!!!! Life saving!!! You are doing good for so
many people!
How to choose the strike price for leap? Deep in the money or out of money strike price
Great info and take-aways. Thanks, Chris!
Hi, do you have a video on Roll Overs?
Sup Chris -- Sounds all good but lets say you have a long ITM 2+ year LEAP call but underlying is reporting earnings soon (and you dont want to sell due to taxes or whatever) -- how do you avoid IV crush-- IV affects only extrinsic value which is greater on leaps then shorter term options- Maybe sell a call -- and which strike (right above or above what the expected move would be?
i learn so much on this channel thank you chris, great job
We studied that delta could not be greater than 1, but why is the delta 50 in the video?? Rly want to try my hand on LEAPS lol
I enjoy your Videos .. much more now that i understand more lol .. at todays date 3/2/022 did you make that leap option on spy and hold till this yr ?
So Thera is only subtracted from share price & not the call premium? What about delta?
If I didn't know any better I'd say this is "Mike" from the tastytrade lessons. His voice is identical and the only difference is the hair :)
Yeah ... Mike is his brother ... get about same stuff on TastyTrade (he used to work there with his brother).
within the first 5 seconds, I was thinking the same thing.
Fantastic video for LEAPS option, thank you.
It's really a great lecture. I'm new to options trading, just wondering @8:04 you mentioned that for a 1 dollar change in the SPY price, we would get 50 dollars. Is n't it supposed to be 50 cents for 1 dollar increment in the price?
A $0.50 change in the option price means a $50 change in your P/L, since a $0.50 change in the option price really represents a $50 change in the option's premium. So I just skipped a step and said a 1 dollar change in SPY would result in a $50 change in P/L.
@@projectfinance Thank you!
Hello, would this be a useful tool to make long-term bets on stocks or other underlying securities that you believe will move substantially in your favor -but you are not sure of the time frame, it could be 6 months, 1 year, 2 years or even beyond, would you still look to make the option inexpensive by looking at OTM options with 25-40 delta for example as oppose to Deep ITM LEAPs? Thoughts?
Yes, I personally do. I think the time frame you choose is up to you. If I think the move will happen in 6-12 months, then I'd go 2 years out to give myself time. I think you can always safely go further out, even if you think the move will be a few weeks, but by going further out you'll pay a higher premium for the option (assuming same strike). But the added time is a safety net in case you're wrong.
Are leaps a good store of value?
I wouldn't call them a store of value, but they are much better positions to allocate money to than short-term options. I will be allocating money to 2+ year call options in stocks that I want lots of exposure to in the future. The long call LEAPS strategy is one of my most believed-in approaches. But admittedly, I have none of these positions on right now as the market is pretty insane with the increases we've already seen over the past few months. I had many profitable long-term call positions that I've already exited for healthy profits.
Excellent. Great lessons
Thanks! 😃
Just wanted to say thanks!
You're welcome! I just spent a ton of time creating an Options Trading for Beginners PDF (170+ pages now) that includes my best explanations/visuals explaining key options trading concepts and strategies. Check it out: www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/g7d402wnapqexq344ct73/options-trading-for-beginners-aug15-v1.pdf?rlkey=dort61xyaz1rubndbwbqmhd5i&dl=0
If you want updates to the PDF over the coming months/additional learning resources, consider dropping your email on the page here: geni.us/options-trading-pdf
Hi, I really liked your explaining Leap options and how they magnify returns.
I was looking at a video by a channel called “James Bulltard” and he describes Leap options he recently placed on Amazon.
I’m not sure if his video is legit or if it’s not to be trusted. Would you mind taking a look at that video (his most recent one!) and let me know if it “looks good” or if you think it’s not a real trade / a suspect video.
It’s hard to know who is for real on TH-cam, but I trust you. Thanks! 🙏🏼😊 Coco
By far the best options channel. Keep it up
would you recommend LEAPS to optimize tax strategy?
Nah use IRA
Derek Wicks what about in a taxable account?
@@sanbetski did you find out how it’s taxes? I’d think they’d be capital gains. Right?
@@alexlee8639 yup 0, 15, 20 percent tax rate depending on tax bracket
what if the open interest is high, but volume is low....Still a safe play?
What you think about a walmart call for 125 to expire may 15th?
Good stuff and ty sir. ..What happen if I waited until the expiration date for a leap options to expire?
Depends on the underlying.
What is your view on selling LEAP PUTs deep ITM? Advantages/risks vs buying LEAP CALLs?
Selling LEAP puts is the best way to blow up your account.
I buy the furthest leaps ITM calls and consider them as long term assets. Of course I also sell short term calls against it. Can you make a video about more detail in rolling the long call forward? For example, do I change the strike? Do I use the same delta? Do I always roll every year or every quarter when the new leaps comes out? Should I roll for debit or credit? More importantly, how do I compare and what standard should I use to make decision between different decisions in rolling leaps forward?
Does tastyworks allow EU Citizen to open accounts?
I tried ToS, WeBull and Robinhood, but none allowed me to open accounts,
I'm currently trying SaxoBank and IB but I'm not really happy with either
I don’t understand why the long LEAP option increased so much. I feel like this was left out. The delta on the 300 Call in March would have been tiny.
Can you tell me what the “300” strike represents in this example??
it represents that you are paying an upfront cost to be able to buy 100shares times the amount of contracts at 300 dollars a share by that date. however we are not going to actually buy them with this strategy we are paying the upfront cost for that right and then selling that right to someone else for more than we bought it
@@theblackdeath10 is it out ocf the boney call?
I was looking to some of the stocks and they have open interest about 16k 28k for the particular price that I was interested in so I'm guessing that's pretty good strike price
why leaps are better then synthetics (buy call sell put same strike atm)???
How would this strategy work for LEAP option way ITM, say at the .80 Delta? How would one still make money off the LEAP? Thanks!
Thanks man. How can I send you some money. I really appreciate what you’re doing. Do you have a tshirt or any merch that I can buy to help you out. I’ve watched a ton of your videos
Just started trading options, your videos are very clear and informative ! Thank you!
I have a question maybe you can help with. I am currently in the situation where I want to exercise call options because of the potential dividends. But I don’t have all the cash to exercise all my contracts. What’s my best option to exercise all and can I use margin in my favor to exercise contracts.. basically creating a loop
Exercise contract with cash, use stock equity margin to exercise more contracts / I’m thinking once I buy the stocks the equity also increases therefore I have more margin?
good stuff. Don't let your leaps expire, roll them
Tell me why?
gold and silver coming correction, possibly 10 to 20 percent. should we close our otm gold silver leaps, and then buy them again at a lower price, or shall we hang on? Aug20
where can i get the picture or painting in background??
Thank u 🙏
Would you be better with an deep in the money call option? The delta would be better
Your prem would then be very high so it's a balanced act
At around 12:15, you mention "taking the options off." What does that mean? Don't you need to hold until the contract expires? How do you get out "early"?
You can sell them. Just like buying a stock and selling it later. You can sell an option that you own. You don't have to wait until expiration.
@@projectfinance sorry, I'm new to this. So, could you theoretically buy an option and then sell covered calls against it? Thank you so much for your response!
Yes, that would be a call spread (buy a call and short a call at a higher strike price).