It's been 29 months since my last video and I'm thrilled to finally share a new one! I have been super busy with startup stuff so YT has fallen a bit behind, but still love making videos and will be back again!
Risk management should always come first, the reason many traders lose money is not simply due to inexperience or a lack of knowledge of the market, but because of poor risk management
Right, but then proper risk management doesn't guarantee profitable trading. If you want to acquire better trading results emphasize more on trading when liquidity is present. Nevertheless you need to be able to analyze good market entries and exit
@@GideonMitchell17Identifying good market entries and exit has been a very troubling for me. What does it take to analyze good market entries and exit like you mentioned???
Substantially it takes assistance from an expert to perceive good market entries, demand and supply zone. I don't even worry about market entries and exit since I trade with trading Expert. She runs the risk management and research while I get good earnings through her strategies
I take a shot everytime you make a bad joke. It's an important topic which you explaiend simply and that's important. Thank you for that. But there's no need for hamhanded humor. Don't repeat the mistakes of smug youtubers, who push their ego into their videos. Keep it about the information.
Derivatives are complex financial instruments that require a good understanding of the underlying assets and the specific characteristics of the derivative being traded. They can be valuable tools when used appropriately and by professionals, but can also involve substantial risks if not properly understood or managed.
@@HarperScott-pk6uk The key idea behind derivatives is that their value is based on the expected future price movements of the underlying asset. So it almost impossible to avoid risk. As a trader you shouldn't do all the work yourself, you could get an expert to manage the risk for you while you make profit.
Nicely said. Sufficiently managing risk is essential for successful trading. And if you're working with a risk management expert as a trader, it should be a very reliable one. That is the only way loses can be minimized.
This is an incredible video explaining such a difficult topic better than my lecturers. It is so well made and keeps it interesting, this deserves millions of views!
This is the first time I am watching videos from this channel, and I have to say, I am a big fan. I went through uncountable videos to get the concept of derivates sorted and failed, but you did that for me in roughly 10 minutes.
@@The-Rest-of-Us I'd be the happiest if you make more videos. I made a twitter account just to follow you and youre the only one i follow. I am glad I found your channel, please make more videos.
Oh yeah you have to see the favourable rise in profit trading the foreign exchange market, This will be the best time to invest in foreign exchange market based on current status
@Frank Moore I don't think 10k is too small to start with, all you need is a good portfolio diversification manager to guide you I started investing with 5k
This is the best explanation on Derivatives i had even seen, great going. I request you to please make some video like this on Financial Derivatives like : Exotics vs Traditional options (Traditional vs Alternatives)
Watched your tesla video shortly after it came out, recently got into the stock market, and was baffled over how futures and calls and such worked, thank you for clarifying!
this is actually a really well-done video. the phenomenon is well explained and I definitely can't wait to check out more of your work. well done. please keep sharing more videos.
"The reason Buffet called derivatives Weapons of Mass destruction isn't because they're inherently destructive [...] speculators made derivatives destructive when they risk money they don't have to make a profit they don't need."
I don't understand... In the first example, you said the original seller of bike can sell his side of the contract for $100 dollars. Then, when he does, his friend (who he initially wanted to sell to) has to sell the bike to the person who bought the futures contract? Is it not supposed to be that when the due date comes, the person who bought the contract for $100 has to sell the bike to the friend? Like, why does the friend have to sell the bike if he originally wanted to buy it? He could want it for personal use...
really enjoyed the humor with the eloquent description of derivatives. Helped me prep for my quant interview and it busted some of the stress cuz of the humor. great work!
I got a notification the first time after starting using youtube and that of your video. I literally pressed the bell icon only for your channel 29 months back
Yes, a well made video. I can see the effort put in to this. Not just the simplified words and information, but also the timeline in which you introduced the next thing. Not to mention how the video also does very well in explaining with pictures and moving arrows, label, etc. I need visual learning, and this was done well. Especially learning something a bit complex/confusing for the first time.
At first I was intrigued because I didn't know why this popped-up in my subscriptions feed, then I remember that subbed to your channel about a year ago and I'm really happy I did. This was so interesting!
I really appreciate your efforts! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (behave today finger ski upon boy assault summer exhaust beauty stereo over). How should I go about transferring them to Binance?
I am in a class trying to understand this and I couldn't. I watched a video before this and kinda understood. Because of this video, I understand fully. Thank you SO MUCH!!!
I thought this was about mathematical derivatives at first :D Great video - but couldn't there also be more types of derivatives than the one shown here? For example: ☞ Both parties could have a destroy button ☞ Instead of an upfront premium, pressing the destroy button could cost money Are these ideas infeasible, just not widely used or just don't fall under the term derivatives?
The first one would not be feasible as at least one party would always have the incentive to burn. The second one does make sense, but is not common in this context. It does, however, exist in work contracts (like actors can buy themselves out of movie contracts etc.)
this is easily the most valued LIKE I have ever given - I wish I can buy ur products but am overseas and I prefer to put it on call options but man this is fantastic education content. BTW ur audience are the people tying to save and invest, selling clothing is not a good idea :D
Derivatives are not all zero sum games. I sell Puts all the time on companies that I want to buy at a discount. The buyer of my Put would be purchasing himself an insurance of sorts on his securities. Did the buyer of my contract "lose"? Idk... I'd say no but I suppose it depends on how you view insurance. Good video nonetheless -- You took a very complex topic and made it an enjoyable watch.
Oh my god thank you so much I’m going to watch this as many times as I need to completely understand.. brilliant way of explaining to such a discalculia person as me… thank you 🙏🙏🙏😊
Hey do you mind NOT commenting with your main account? It’s extremely unfair and I want to see good ORIGINAL comments, not just pitch meetings reference every time. You go to every Ryan George video, and you comment the exact same joke every time just so you can get more likes than everyone else and get more hearts and feel good about yourself. You ruin comment sections. Edit: Not to mention the sub bots.
I don't know why you placed seller on the left (2:00) just to later on (4:29) switch him to the right. Somehow it complicated the whole thing for me. Overall, great video.
The put options example is exactly the opposite of what this video is describing. Wouldn't "you" be the seller receive the premium when selling the contract to the "seller"? Also, the seller can exercise their contracts forcing "you" the seller to buy the stocks.
drat the accent is throwing me off curses, western culture and your necessity to use the english laguge to reach statistically the biggest potential audience
With cost hedging, the idea of the hedge showing in the image was to signify what was taken, namely the lower prices where possible and "cutting out" the higher prices?