Why Trading Stock Options is Better in a Rece
stock options trading for a recessionary market
The 2008 recession and stock market crash is the worst financial and
economic crisis since the great depression. By Feb 2009, the Dow has dropped almost
50%, erasing all its gains since 1998. In terms of absolute points, the Dow has
dropped over 7000 points, which is more than the entire Dow index before 1998.
Without doubt, this stock market crash has rendered many traders and investors
helpless in search for profit.
Even though profiting during such market condition is a really tough
thing to do, traders and investors still bought stocks in hope of a recovery
only to be disappointed again and again leaving a bunch of stocks in deep
losses in their account. When money is used this way, what it really does is to
rob investors and traders of cash for investing when the real recovery starts.
So, is there a way to place those bets with very little money and limit
your losses to negligible amounts if your bet is wrong as it had been so many
times in this stock market crash so far? Yes, the answer can be found in stock options trading
(https://www.optiontradingpedia.com).
Everyone knows that stock options trading is risky and that you could
potentially lose all your money. What everyone failed to recognize is the fact
that stock options trading is also a risk limited way of trading for big profits
while controlling potential losses to negligible amounts!
Stock
options (https://www.optiontradingpedia.com/stock_options.htm) are contracts
that allow you to buy a stock at a specific price no matter how high the price
of that stock is in the future (Call
Options (https://www.optiontradingpedia.com/call_options.htm)) or sell
the stock at a specific price no matter how low the price of the stock is in
the future (Put
Options).
By replacing the buying of the stock with buying its call options, you
will be able to control the profits on a stock using just a small amount of
money. If the stock goes up, you simply sell the call options for the same
profit as you would as if you bought the stocks. If the stock goes down, you
lose nothing more than the small amount of money you paid for the call option
contract. See where I am going with this? If you had bought only the call
options of those stocks that you have bought all of last year, you would have
lost only a small fraction of the losses that you would already have incurred
through buying the stocks.
Let’s look at an example.
John and Peter have $15000 to invest with each and they both decided to
buy shares of Apple Inc, AAPL, after it has dropped to $141 in October 2008,
expecting a rebound. Peter decided to buy 100 shares with $14,100 and John
decided to play it conservative and bought 1 contract of AAPL’s call options
with strike price of $140 which was asking at $10.20 for a total price of
$1020. 1 contract of call options allows you to control the profit of 100
shares of the underlying stock. In this case, John totally replaced the buying
of 100 shares of AAPL with buying 1 contract of its call options. 2 weeks
later, AAPL fell all the way to $85 as the recession deepened. Peter lost over
$5600 while John lost only the $1020 that he spent buying the call options.
Assuming both Peter and John were right about AAPL and the stock rallies
to $200. Peter would have made $5900 in profit while John would have made the
same $5900 less the amount of $1020 that he paid for the call options.
See how buying stock options rather than the stock itself in this
volatile condition allow you to make a few bets for a rebound without risking
all your money? In the above example, Peter would only be able to make one bet
once on AAPL with $15,000 while John would have been able to make those same
bets more than 10 times at strategic support levels. Who would have a better
chance of winning?
By replacing the purchase of stocks with controlling the same number of
shares of that stock through its call options, you would definitely have a
better chance of survival in this recessionary market condition. Be warned
however, that you fully expect to lose the entire amount of money paid on the
call options should the stock continue to go down, which is why you NEVER use
all your money in a single trade.