Thursday, October 8, 2009

Best Auto Forex Systems

Trading Program Courses

Forex Auto Pilot
- The Forex Auto Pilot System (FAPS for short) grants you access to your very own - Proven, Auto Pilot No-Guesswork Software with an in-built advisory system and step-by-step blueprints on how to use it - completely removing the ‘human error’ factor

This powerful proprietary software comes complete with step-by-step training material that will teach you how to begin making money right from the moment you start!


Forex Hitter
- Forex is an extremely complex market, consisting of many more factors than you would ever imagine. The software analyses these factors simultaneously (something a human can never do) and instantly determines the correct pattern. It then places the orders for you and closes them once the pattern exhausts, leaving you with pure profits and tons of pleasure from its impeccable instant performance. No words can describe it better than the results that speak for themselves.

Get A Forex Trading Robot That Is Capable Of Doubling Your Money Every Single Month...Earn $40,000 in first month HERE



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10 Minute Forex Wealth Builder
- Live trades on video and much more. Very attractive package from a system building successful trader.


Forex Killer
- It is used by professionals & beginners alike with no experience whatsoever.

You can start with as little as $500 USD on a real forex account or learn the ropes on a demo account without risking any real money at all.

It works with all trading platforms because it is an independent program. You just have to feed it with market data and follow it's trading advice

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Get Rich With Forex Here - Forex Profit Training - $500 into $9000 in 1 month

Forex trading courses where you will learn how to generate thousands of dollars on the Forex. This Robot works.

Low Startup – Start with as little as $50!
Huge Market - $3 TRILLION traded around the world every day (The Forex market is actually bigger than ALL the world's stock, bond, and futures markets combined! They don't mention that on the 5 o'clock news)

24/6 – Non stop action, 24 hours a day 6 days per week (Sunday - Friday)
Low Cost – While with stock trading, futures and options you pay spread plus commission, with Forex your only "cost of trade" is spread (that can add up to ALOT!)

Up & Down – Profit from rising and falling prices...it does not matter what way the market goes. Up, Down, Sideways, there are always opportunities to profit.

No Size Limit – as BIG or as SMALL as you want!

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Earn $9000 first month with this FOREX system

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Wealth Building Option Strategies

Stock Options - The Greatest Wealth Building Tool Ever Invented

It is a well known fact that serious investors seeking long term growth of capital have as their main objectives the two most basic goals in investing:
• to find an investment vehicle that would effectively preserve capital and minimize risk in the face of a fluctuating and constantly flexing economy • the investment vehicle must provide better than decent yields in all economic conditions to promote constant growth of capital value.

With the stock market as the premiere choice due to its historical record of outperforming all other investments over time, people are increasingly turning to the stock market as their main investment vehicle for future capital growth. It is here where much higher rates of return can be made with a relatively small increase in risk to capital.

With thousands of books, manuals, internet sites, seminars and courses offering investment strategies and trading systems in the stock market and its derivatives, there are few, if any, that deliver the ideal investment vehicle sought by the long term investor in search of safety and high returns. Not only is there a near total absence of an ideal investment system but there are many that promise eye popping, mind boggling returns and, they are exactly that; mere promises.

Most of the trading systems offered are structured on strategies or activities that work when conditions are ideally suited to the program being peddled. Most of their successes are highly dependent on picking the right stocks at the right time. In other words you must be a good stock picker or use a stock picking service (for a high monthly fee) to select the right ones for you. Market timing is also an important factor in their systems. Again, you must be a good market timer or depend on a service that provides market timing signals (also for a high monthly fee). These supposedly high yield investment programs don't say anything about how bad things can be when conditions go against their predictions. These programs do exactly as promised: great when the going is good but disastrous when the going is bad. Without doubt many have been taken by these so-called services and while an investor/trader may be successful for a while, the end result over a long period of time is always the same - no better than if you had done the selections yourself. While there is no one investment system or vehicle that can be an answer-all to the various goals of various investors, there are some investment alternatives that can come close to satisfying the two basic needs of safety and decent returns. Diversified mutual funds have been touted as the answer to these basic needs. But over the years these funds have shown that during downturns in the economy they perform just as badly as the whole investment market in general. And, over the long term, many of these diversified funds have failed to even match market performance in general, much less outperform it.

Enter market derivatives with emphasis options.

Trading in stock options has become very popular with institutional investors as well as private individuals as a sound money management system supplementing their investment portfolios. The ability of stock options to give the investor a wide range of choices is what has made the options market grow considerably over the last two decades. To quote one options expert: "Stock options are the greatest wealth producing tool ever invented on this planet. . . . if you know how to use them". The key element of this statement is: . . . if you know how to use them.

For many people the mere mention of stock options, sends shivers up their spine. They look at options as synonymous with great risk. But isn't driving a car very dangerous for one who doesn't know how to drive? The ability of stock options to give the investor a wide range of choices in stock market investments is what has made the options market grow by leaps and bounds over the last twenty years. Statistics compiled by the Options Industry Council, a group that educates investors about options, show that volume in options trading has risen tremendously in recent years. Further, studies show that individual investors make up 60% of the market.

For the individual who has sufficient funds and is looking for more than a decent return on his capital and with controllable risk, stock options may be the answer.

There are dozens of option trading systems being employed by individual investors and institutions. Each system is designed to accomplish a specific investment goal. A financial institution may use long put options to hedge its winnings in stocks that have appreciated in value. Another investor may buy call options instead of stocks to enter a position in a security that has caught his fancy. Still another may sell calls against his stock holdings to generate income from his stock position, or what is popularly known as covered call writing.

Of the dozens of option trading systems there is one that can be carried out as a long term investment program offering a fair degree of safety and consistent high returns over time, thus satisfying the investor's two basic needs of safety and return.

This is the selling of uncovered or naked options.

But wait! Is it not said that selling naked options carries the risk of unlimited losses? Isn't this a contradiction?

Indeed selling naked options when done carelessly and without a disciplined strategic program is extremely risky!

But by using a carefully planned and disciplined system of trading, the so-called "unlimited risk" factor in selling options can easily be conquered. There is a three-pronged trading strategy being used by one successful options trader that is proving to be a consistent winner in all market conditions. It is a trading technique that couples naked option selling with a modified ratio credit spread and the use of the roll over feature. While naked option selling has acquired a bad rap of being highly risky, this three-pronged trading strategy allows the trader to defeat the risk. Not only is the system able to substantially reduce the risk, it also offers one the ability to become a savvy investor/trader without having to depend on picking the right stocks or timing the market.

It involves utilizing the system in any market condition using only one or a few stocks, ETFs or indexes (the latter two are more effective). One need not worry about finding the right stocks or timing the trades. The fact remains that stocks behave, more often than not, in crazy and irrational ways so that one can almost say that consistently choosing winning stocks is as good as a random walk down Wall Street. Rather than be proactive and try to predict and time the market, as many try to do, this three-pronged investment system is reactive. The prescribed trades are done in reaction to how the market has moved, not in anticipation of its future behavior.

This three-pronged trading system does not promise quick profits or mind boggling yields but steady annual returns in excess of 30%. Many are averaging returns of 50% to 60%. It would be prudent to say that in times of deep downturns the system may not deliver the promised returns but it will hold its own and will definitely outperform the market.

One options trader that has mastered this three-pronged trading technique has decided to share his knowledge of the system by writing an e-book on its methodology. Borrowing from that quote about options being a great wealth producing tool he has aptly titled his work: STOCK OPTIONS: THE GREATEST WEALTH BUILDING TOOL EVER INVENTED. In it he details the step by step methodology of this trading technique and gives an exhaustive series of sample trades covering several months of transactions. It shows the effectiveness of the system in an up market, down market and horizontal market using only one ETF stock. To this day the writer continues to use only one or two ETFs in all his options trades and he includes a web page that shows his current and actual trading results month by month on an ongoing frequency. For more information visit his web site: http://www.theoptionseller.com

Make $40,000 trading the FOREX NOW

Monday, June 29, 2009

Straddle Trades - Long and Short Straddles

Learn to use calls together or puts together to create straddles.

The straddle strategy is an option strategy that's based on buying both a call and put of a stock. Note that there are various forms of straddles, but we will only be covering the basic straddle strategy. To initiate a Straddle, we would buy a Call and Put of a stock with the same expiration date and strike price. For example, we would initiate a Straddle for company ABC by buying a June $20 Call as well as a June $20 Put.

Now why would we want to buy both a Call and a Put? Calls are for when you expect the stock to go up, and Puts are for when you expect the stock to go down, right?

In an ideal world, we would like to be able to clearly predict the direction of a stock. However, in the real world, it's quite difficult. On the other hand, it's relatively easier to predict whether a stock is going to move (without knowing whether the move is up or down). One method of predicting volatility is by using the Technical Indicator called Bollinger Bands.

For example, you know that ABC's annual report is coming out this week, but do not know whether they will exceed expectations or not. You could assume that the stock price will be quite volatile, but since you don't know the news in the annual report, you wouldn't have a clue which direction the stock will move. In cases like this, a Straddle strategy would be good to adopt.

If the price of the stock shoots up, your Call will be way In-The-Money, and your Put will be worthless. If the price plummets, your Put will be way In-The-Money, and your Call will be worthless. This is safer than buying either just a Call or just a Put. If you just bought a one-sided option, and the price goes the wrong way, you're looking at possibly losing your entire premium investment. In the case of Straddles, you will be safe either way, though you are spending more initially since you have to pay the premiums of both the Call and the Put.

Let's look at a numerical example:

For stock XYZ, let's imagine the share price is now sitting at $63. There is news that a legal suit against XYZ will conclude tomorrow. No matter the result of the suit, you know that there will be volatility. If they win, the price will jump. If they lose, the price will plummet.

So we decide to initiate a Straddle strategy on the XYZ stock. We decide to buy a $65 Call and a $65 Put on XYZ, $65 being the closest strike price to the current stock price of $63. The premium for the Call (which is $2 Out-Of-The-Money) is $0.75, and the premium for the Put (which is $2 In-The-Money) is $3.00. So our total initial investment is the sum of both premiums, which is $3.75.

Fast forward 2 days. XYZ won the legal battle! Investors are more confident of the stock and the price jumps to $72. The $65 Call is now $7 In-The-Money and its premium is now $8.00. The $65 Put is now Way-Out-Of-The-Money and its premium is now $0.25. If we close out both positions and sell both options, we would cash in $8.00 + $0.25 = $8.25. That's a profit of $4.50 on our initial $3.75 investment!

Of course, we could have just bought a basic Call option and earned a greater profit. But we didn't know which direction the stock price would go. If XYZ lost the legal battle, the price could have dropped $10, making our Call worthless and causing us to lose our entire investment. A Straddle strategy is more conservative and will profit whether the stock goes up or down.

If Straddles are so good, why doesn't everybody use them for every investment?

It fails when the stock price doesn't move. If the price of the stock hovers around the initial price, both the Call and the Put will not be that much In-The-Money. Furthermore, the closer it is to the expiration date, the cheaper premiums are. Option premiums have a Time Value associated with them. So an option expiring this month will have a cheaper premium than an option with the same strike price expiring next year.

So in the case where the stock price doesn't move, the premiums of both the Call and Put will slowly decay, and we could end up losing a large percentage of our investment. The bottom line is: for a Straddle strategy to be profitable, there has to be volatility, and a marked movement in the stock price.

A more advanced investor can tweak Straddles to create many variations. They can buy different amounts of Calls and Puts with different Strike Prices or Expiration Dates, modifying the Straddles to suit their individual strategies and risk tolerance.

If you want to read more information on straddles and other option strategies, visit
http://www.option-trading-guide.com/options_guide.html


TradingSolutions: Financial analysis and investment software that combines technical analysis with neural network and genetic algorithms.


Buying Put Options

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Foreign Currency Options

A contract traded in the interbank market to buy or sell a foreign currency. Trades of these option contracts settle either spot or forward.

In the US, options are traded on all currency except the US Dollar. If a put option was invested on an overseas currency, that means the US investor thinks that currency will decline vs. the dollar. If the options trader thought the US dollar would fall, he could buy a foreign currency call option against the dollar.

Call and put options have short term expirations. If a currency option was bought, the investor could lose 100% of the premium invested - if the contract was not exercised or traded prior to the expiration month.

The maximum gain for foreign currency calls is unlimited, since the contract value is based on an increase in the foreign money value.

Puts could gain the full difference between the contract strike price and zero - minus the premium paid. Put options on foreign currency gain when the value declines.


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Sunday, April 5, 2009

Price Earnings Ratio Formula - PE Ratio Calculation

Investors and traders often look at the PE for value based on stock price and earnings.

Many analysts and stock traders look at the price earnings ratio of stocks to judge value when buying. The PE Ratio is calculated by dividing the current market price by it's earnings per share. This is also known as a stock's multiple and a common financial formula.

When the raio is higher, it can indicate that a security is over priced, relative to other stocks in it's industry. While this should not be the only investment indicator a stock investor should look at, it is a true number - combining the real market price and the real earnings on a per share basis.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Vertical Spreads - Price Contracts

Introducing Options Strategy - Vertical spread

There are more than 20 options strategies can be applied, but one of my favorite is Vertical Spread. The meaning of vertical spread is that you purchase and sell options of the same type (same stock symbol) with same expiration date but with the different strike price.

In Vertical spread, you can choose to apply bull put spread, bear call spread, bull call spread and bear put spread. Bull put spread or bull call spread can be applied when you think that the stock is bullish, that’s what the bull word imply. And if you think the market is bearish, use the otherwise strategies (bear call spread and bear put spread) which have the bear word in it.

When the option sold is more expensive than the options bought, there is a net credit, this strategy call vertical credit spread. Both Bull put spread and Bear call spread are credit spread. Therefore, without fail you have the money in your pocket immediately after the button click on screen.








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The benefit of using Vertical Credit Spread is that you can limit your loss due to the spread. Take an example, if your spread difference is $5, your limiting lost will be $500 (every option contract = 100 stock, therefore multiply by 100). The smaller the spread, the better chance to win as you minimize your risk.

My preferred strategy is using 2.5 spread, for example, sell/buy a pair of options strike price of 25 and 22.5, the difference is the spread which is 2.5 in this example.

On the other hand, selling a spread is normally better than buying a spread. Becoming the seller makes you have the advantage of the time value of the options. As you know that when option price is decreasing when close to the expired date, like a water fall pattern, time is on your side.

For an example, if you are selling QQQQ strike price 45 and buying the strike price 43, you have 2 dollar spread. Selling $0.8 option of the strike price 45 and buying at $0.3 option at 43 strike price make you have the credit of $0.5. If QQQQ hovers above 45 until the expiry date, you earn the credit of $50 ($0.5 x 100) by letting both of the options becoming worthless.

Nevertheless, set the stop loss at the level of the sold option minus the credit earn, if you use the above example, the stop loss should be at 44.5. Never allow the stock price drop further than the stop loss target, if it does, buy back the sold leg and let the bought leg run. If you really want to play safe, cut the loss and close the position when the stop loss is triggered.

Doesn’t it sounds too simple to be truth? Find out more from TraderWork.com




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