Options Trading and Technical Analysis
Why Technical Analysis is So Closely Related With Options Trading
Recently, almost no options trading seminar is without some mention or
introduction to technical analysis. In fact, almost all of the options trading
blogs out there in the internet use technical analysis as their main basis of
decision making. Why is that so? Why is options trading so closely related to
technical analysis now?
In order to understand the important relationship between technical
analysis and options trading, we need to first understand what technical
analysis does in the first place.
There are two main methods of analysis; Fundamental Analysis and
Technical Analysis.
Fundamental analysis is the reading of fundamental data of a company or
economy in order to predict and invest in the future performance of the company
or market. Such fundamental data includes profit and loss statements, earnings
growth and earnings guidance. The problem with fundamental analysis is that
great companies do not always make great stocks. Stocks of great companies also
experience periods of downturn, often for extended periods of time. As such
fundamental analysis helps an investor mostly in deciding what stocks to buy
for the long term (5 to 10 years out), if nothing unpredictable happens to the
company in the years down the road. In fact, fundamental analysis is a tool
favorable by investors who buy stocks for their dividends and dividend growth.
Technical analysis is the studying of market data of a stock. Yes, while
Fundamental Analysis is the study of a company, technical analysis studies its
stock exclusively. Such market data includes the price across different time
periods and volume transacted. From price and volume, options traders see how
the price of a stock is doing no matter what the company data is doing. This
helps traders and investors avoid those extended periods of downturn even
though a company’s fundamental data looks great. Indeed, while fundamental
analysis tells an investor which company is doing well, technical analysis
tells an investor when it is time to buy or sell its stocks. Indeed, the
strength of technical analysis is in its ability to guide the buying and
selling decisions of investors across short time periods through price patterns
and price trends.
So, why is technical analysis such a favorite in options
trading?
Lets recall that fundamental analysis is favorable for long term
investing and technical analysis is favorable for use even in short time
periods. Stock traders can hold stocks forever but options expire after a fixed
time! Yes, options typically last no more than a year and options traders
frequently use options trading strategies that require extremely short outlooks
in terms of months or weeks. This is exactly why technical analysis is so
closely associated with options trading. Options traders simply do not have the
luxury to hold a position for years like stock traders do. On top of that,
options traders do not receive dividends like stock investors do. The only way
to make money in options trading is for the expected outlook to play out within
the expiration period of the options. This makes the fundamental strength of
the company it is based on relatively unimportant. On top of that, options
traders are able to profit when stocks drop as well. This also makes identifying
good companies through fundamental analysis relatively unimportant.
Indeed, reading price trends and price patterns that might show the
direction a stock is moving the next week or month has more value to options
trading than reading a company profit and loss statement that does not tell you
where its stock may be going for the short term at all.
I hope my short article explains why technical analysis and options
trading are so closely related and that it will help you better understand the
big lack of fundamental analysis whenever the subject of options trading is
raised.
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education.