In trading, possessing technical analysis skills is not sufficient on its own; discipline and emotional maturity play crucial roles in achieving success. Embracing the mindset of "time in the market vs. timing the market" proves valuable, especially during market fluctuations. I attribute my growing daily earnings to Whitney Eston valuable insights and daily trade signals, coupled with my commitment to continuous learning. Kudos to the journey ahead!
The key to financiaI stability is having the right investment suggestions for a diverse portfoIio. Many investment failures and losses happen when you invest without proper guidance.
I trade Small Caps. Rode MBIO today from .31 to .91 I'm ready for a change and am learning Futures. Eventually I flip the switch to Futures full time. It took me 4 months of 12hr days to learn Small Caps and to be successful.
I agree futures are a lot better. Another point to consider is that if someone REALLY wants to fine tune their options trading, and optimize their risk to make up for the lack of certainty about risk like futures offers... they'd have to dig deep into fully understanding all the greeks that determine how calls & puts are priced, and how that could impact their contracts' change in price (or lack thereof). And then during the day, they need to look through the options chain based on all sorts of things like implied volatility, delta, theta, etc. and pick a contract according to what suits their conditions... But that's the problem.. at that point your attention is taken away from the chart itself and put towards the options chain. And sure, you can sometimes get away with just buying whatever is at the money, 1-2 days out.. but that's highly difficult to do consistently because you have to time it well and get a sizeable move. Also: sometimes just buying whatever is at the money can cost $200 per contract, and other times it can cost you $500 per, so that's another wrench thrown into the mix. Futures all the way.
@@kfjmb That's not a "problem" with futures. If you want to trade a company stock, then no shit, you have to trade the company stock or its options. That's not a futures problem. It's like going to the gym and claiming the problem with gyms is that they don't sell fruits and vegetables.
Recently switched to Futures. Enjoy the content! Prop firms are possibly an avenue for Future traders to secure funding and then fund themselves later if successful. I also seen you in another RU-vid video being considered one of the class selling schams on RU-vid. I think you're doing great and you provide a lot of valuable information free. Keep doing your thing bro.
the 543 call your showing in the video wasnt ATM during the entry in. It seemed it was only in ATM at the EOD when your filming the video. But yes I agree with you that options are only good for stocks like NVDA, TSLA, SMCI, AMD and others you cant trade on futures
REPEAT+CONSISTENCY=PROFIT‼ this is key to me to be able to manage risk! I would love to see a video from you on how easy it is to get started with futures and how much is ideal in this inflationary present? I'm reflecting on hearing you talk about this in the class lessons and I wish I had pressed to get started then but I'm convinced now after several decay contracts and this video! SO SIMPLE YET SO MISUNDERSTOOD! THANKS AGAIN FOR THE SIMPLICITY‼‼
Is it worth the $400 dollar win if you have to maintain around $11,000 in your account? If you choose an option with a short expiration date but far enough that its not effected by Theta and making sure the IV is low enough for a move in the S&P 500 or NASDAQ to mimic the price action in those instruments. I feel like an the money call/put costs less and could potentially gain more than only making around $400 with a high maintenance. Would it still be worth it to trade futures?
I agree if your trading 0dte SPY or QQQ. The time will eat up your options quick in consolidation. This is why I buy option that expire the next day. Less time decay. It's a give/get type of thing with options especially 0dte. Even trading TSLA, NVDA, AMD, or any other option contracts I don't recommend trading 0dte unless your willing to risk 50 percent of your position on a trade, if your stop is reasonable.
Options don't "grow an account faster" any more than they can drain your account faster. Suggesting "grow account faster" like it's a benefit is nonsensical.
Options are basically a gamble. Futures are short term trade of stocks on leverage / margin. But, nothing as safe and profitable as medium to long term investment. Just buy a bunch of stocks when they're low and exit off when they recover. Keep some extra money to average each stock in your portfolio until $0.01. Simply add more at every fall... Example: Buy stock X at $100 for $1000. Keep another $1000 for the same stock on standby. If the stock rises and you are in profit and exit it, just do so, take profit and move on to next one. If the stock falls by say 10%, then add $100 worth of stock from the standby money and when stock falls 20% from your initial bought price, then add 10% more and so on. This way, your breakeven will keep falling lower and lower. Now keep target at the initial price of $100 and exit with profits and enjoy!
If risk management is the cornerstone of a successful trader why would you trade options? Every answer you have is gambling oriented. You got some degenerative habits. You can do it as many have but not unless you’re willing to have inconsistent losses .