How high can the S&P go?

Discussion in 'Trading' started by Romeo, Sep 17, 2003.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Romeo

    Romeo

    this once promising thread has been cut in half in only its first day. And the posts that were deleted could have stayed, and now the thread has lost much of its meaning.:mad:
     
    #11     Sep 17, 2003
  2. You mean like the post that quoted another member and said his post was ignorant and he either doesn't trade or loses money, followed by the post that said he does trade and loses money because he trades... like all of us, followed by the post that berated the member for saying that, followed by the post that explained to the berater that the beratee was not berating the berater, followed by the post by the beratee agreeing with the explainer that he was not berating the berater, followed by the post that said the beratee's first post went way over the head of the berater, followed by the post where the berater apologized to the beratee and then said the member who is referenced first in this post is an idiot, followed by the beratee's post saying no prob to the berater and indicating all this crap would be deleted?

    And my question is rhetorical because that is the entire substance of the posts that were deleted. So except for the fact that my call that we have seen the high this week until we see the next significant low was deleted also, the rest of it had absolutely nothing to do with "How high can the S&P go."
     
    #12     Sep 17, 2003
  3. =============
    September has an excellant track record of red, down % of all the months.:cool:

    Dont care to guess the numbers as far year end;
    however uptrends ,[non September uptrends ], go further than i guess they will
    and first year bull markets are famous for upside % gains.
    =====

    SPY did 777 million in buy volume last month.
    :)
     
    #13     Sep 18, 2003
  4. Romeo

    Romeo

    Alot of trading talk can be very boring. That's part of the reason the threads with some "zest" to them are popular. The part in question was a funny sideshow to this thread, but it was funny, and added a light hearted element to the serious nature of trading.

    I know I could always use a laugh.
     
    #14     Sep 18, 2003
  5. Tea

    Tea

    Romeo wrote on 9/12 & 9/13:
    O.K., I'm going to take a flyer.....go out on a ledge.... and say that your prediction will be wrong as a three dollar bill - the S&P500 will exceed 1032.

    :D
     
    #15     Sep 18, 2003
  6. Ditch

    Ditch

    They don't even care about how obvious it is, still .. how disgusting this may be, don't fight it.
     
    #16     Sep 18, 2003
  7. Mvic

    Mvic

    do you just keep selling them at higher strikes? At what point do you cover and how do you cover or do you even cover at all? Money mangement skills must be very developed to survive long with that strategy.

    Just for fun 1080-1100.
     
    #17     Sep 18, 2003
  8. Romeo

    Romeo

    please read my first post of this thread.

    And remember, the only way to be a successful trader is if you have the ability to change your mind as market forces change.
     
    #18     Sep 18, 2003
  9. Romeo

    Romeo

    Yes, very true.

    This month, I sold 1050 calls, as I had an upward bias to my S&P prediction. As you can see, they're making me sweat it out till the bitter end.
     
    #19     Sep 18, 2003
  10. Mvic

    Mvic

    can be a very lucrative strategy (especially in a range bound market as we have had on the SP last few months before it broke out) with good money management. It allows you to increase your probability of a profitable trade substantially while allowing allot of leeway regarding accurate prediction of price movement (in otherwords if you sell a 1050 call you come out of it with a profitable trade as long as the SP closes at 1050+ premium collected).

    How would you deal with a move above 1050, would you then sell a higher strike or would you cover with the futures? Would you wait until you got to break even to cover?

    In the long run does this strategy beat the SP on an annual basis?
     
    #20     Sep 18, 2003
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.