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Can you double your account every six months?


A while ago I got an email from one of my Seeking Alpha readers. He told me that he is a big fan of my articles and asked how he can learn more. He wanted to make it his new career. He asked me if I can recommend any books or internet sites to learn/practice the options strategies. Then he said that he is new to trading options, he set aside a small amount of money in hopes of doubling it at least yearly.

Don't you find it amazing? The guy admits he is new to options, but wants to double the account "at least yearly".

 

Do you have realistic expectations?

 

My reply was:

 

"There is a lot of hype surrounding options trading. Some "gurus" out there will make you to believe that doubling your account every 6-12 months is an easy task. If it was, we all would be millionaires by now. My advice to you: if you just start options trading, preserving your capital during your first year of trading would be a great achievement"

 

I didn't hear from him since then. He probably went to one of those charlatans who promise to double your account in one month and charge you few thousand dollars for a week of “one on one consulting”. Many people will tell you what you want to hear to get your hard earned money.

 

Here is another email from one of our members:

 

"I'm new to options trading. I'm retired and am hoping to make $1.25 million per year by trading"

 

This member cancelled after just 2 weeks. Why I'm not surprised? And honestly, I would be very interested to know the psychology behind people thinking they can have no experience with something, probably not even know how to place an order, and start making money with options right away. A 7 figure income in this case. But maybe it's the same psychology that makes people to believe that they can lose 50 pounds in 2 months without any effort..

 

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Making money with options is easy?

 

Here is the problem:

 

Making money with options is easy. Doing it consistently is much more difficult. People see all the hype and think it is an easy task. To become an engineer you have to study 4 years, and probably another 4 years (at least) to become a good one. Why people expect it to be different in trading?

 

I see sales pages all the time that show you 200%+ returns on some cheap options they bought. But what they don’t tell you is that those trades happen once in a while and are not consistent. Maybe they did make 200%+ on a trade, but that doesn’t happen all the time and to set your expectations that high would be very ignorant.

 

One website "challenges" you to turn 3k into 100k in four months (that's 3,233% in four months), charging $600/month in the process. They claim to do it successfully 2 times out of 11 challenges, but since the website is live less than a year, only one challenge was traded live. Incidentally, the live challenge has actually lost 99%.

 

I just got an email from someone saying "Give Me 9 Minutes a Week and I Guarantee You $67,548 a Year. $185 Per Day, Every Day… Forever". Seriously? Is it even legal to make any guarantees in the stock market, not to mention the ethical aspect?

 

There are many options sites that advertise "10%/month" or "5%/week" with no real effort. They might succeed doing that for a limited period of time, but it's only matter of time till they blow up their accounts. What they also "forget" to tell you that they present their returns as ROI (Return On Investment), not return on their whole account. You can read explanation about the difference here. In real life, 10% ROI would usually translate to 7-8% return on the whole account, before commissions.

 

I can assume that those guys are much richer than me. But to me, my integrity is more important than money. Honesty is not a good business and has cost me a lot of potential members, but I will not sell my beliefs and will not mislead people just to get them to sign up. Someone smarter than me said: Here is the inconvenient truth about successful trading: It’s work.

 

Setting realistic expectations is very important. I'm a big fan of the "slow and steady" approach. Aim for many singles instead of few homeruns. Be patient. Be prepared to lose for a while - set your goal as capital preservation instead of doubling your account. Think about the risk first. If you take care of the risk, the profits will come.

 

Are you a quitter?

 

Unfortunately, I see many members who sign up for a SteadyOptions with unrealistic expectations. Here is how it usually works with those members. Statistically, SteadyOptions have about 2-4 really good months every year when we make 20-25%. Those members see those gains and join the service, only to see the next couple months going back to the "boring" 3-4% per month (or even suffering some small losses). They quit, just in time to miss the next hot streak. Believe it or not, but I had few members quitting and re-joining 4-5 times, repeating the same pattern over and over again, always missing the most profitable months. Many of them cancel after just few weeks or 3-4 bad trades.

 

One of my members told me after cancelling that he doesn't need me because he made 100%+ in 2013 trading mostly long calls. Well, 2013 was the best year for the S&P 500 since 1998, so making 100% with highly leveraged long strategies was not that difficult. I doubt this strategy would work well in 2008 or 2000. The key to successful trading is using strategies that work well in any market and have minimal drawdowns. Making 100% per year consistently and over time is an extremely difficult task. If you can do that, you would most definitely be among the top 0.1% traders in the world. In fact, most fund managers would dream to make half of that.

 

Van Tharp says successful trading/investing is 60% psychology...only 60%? Humans desperately want to believe there is a way to make money with no or little risk. That’s why Bernie Madoff existed, and it will never change.

 

Some quick tips and facts

 

My good friend Kirk Du Plessis from OptionAlpha lists few things to consider as you write down your expectations and goals.

  1. More traders lose more money than they make. The figures are a little off depending on who you talk to, but it is 80% to 90% (maybe more) who end up losers and leave the business altogether.
  2. Only a small percentage of retail traders are profitable. The numbers get even smaller if you look at a 3-5 year average which measures consistency. Don’t get discouraged, we all fell off the bike before we learned to ride it right?
  3. Paper trade first with a small amount of money. I always recommend members to paper trade everything first. This applies not only to new traders. Even if you have some experience with options, it always takes some time to get used to new strategies. This way you learn how to enter orders, adjust trades, and more importantly learn you’re your mistakes without losing real money. Then when you are ready to invest real money, keep it small. Prove yourself that you can make money with 10k, then increase it to 20k and so on, but do it gradually.
  4. You will have losing trades. Too many people quitting after a streak of 4-5 losing trades. Losing money is part of the game, the trick is to keep the losses as small as possible.
  5. Don’t expect to become financially independent. Don’t you think it’s completely unrealistic to expect a small account, say under $5,000, to generate consistent income to replace your regular job? I aim for many singles instead of few home runs.


If you are ready to start your journey AND make a long term commitment to be a student of the markets:


Join SteadyOptions!

 

Related Articles:
Why Retail Investors Lose Money In The Stock Market
Are You Ready For The Learning Curve?
How to Calculate ROI in Options Trading
Performance Reporting: The Myths and The Reality
Are You EMOTIONALLY Ready To Lose?
Can You Really Turn $12,415 Into $4M?

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14 minutes ago, Kim said:

Questionnaire from potential member:

Capture.PNG

I suggest looking at BitConnect which was promising a 1% return per day.

5% per week, if you start with $2500, at year 1 it's $31000, at year 2 it's $40000, at year 3 it's $5million.

How about year 5 ? $800 millions.

Edited by Djtux

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Guest Agnika

Posted

I am new in Options strategy, have traded some naked options only. I am realistic, hence I want to start small but I do not have the liberty to trade all day in Options strategies glued to my PC, 1-1.5 hours per day is the maximum which I can dedicate to Options. And of course I am NOT after 100% gains yearly. So will Steady Options subscription be good for me?   

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If you have realistic expectations and are willing to put some efort, there is no reason why you couldn't succeed.

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@Agnika I have been with SO for almost 3 weeks and I think it is a very good resource for options trading education and trade ideas.  You can get in on official SO trades but it will not be very easy if you just wait for things to come to you.   With 1-1.5 hours a day you can do well as long as you put in the work, learn how trades work and have some patience.  Even if you do have some options knowledge, there is still a lot to learn, especially with regards to the SO trade types.  If you are honest with yourself and set your expectations accordingly, I believe that SO can be a very valuable resource.    

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Guest Agnika

Posted

Thanks a lot for your advice! Do  SO  also trade in  LEAPS?

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Guest Werner

Posted

Hi! Thanks for the interesting educational stuff you throw at us and there's a lot of truth in the latin saying "per aspera ad astera" or "the path to success is hard" or "thete's no free lunch out there" ... BUT after 10 years as a value-oriented stock picker who's just picked up options trading a few months ago I must say IT'S NOT THAT HARD you just need "a good sets of rules you trade by and stick with it" and "limit your trade size/risk" ... and guys, don't forget: IT'S WALL STREET NOT LAS VEGAS

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8 hours ago, Guest Werner said:

Hi! Thanks for the interesting educational stuff you throw at us and there's a lot of truth in the latin saying "per aspera ad astera" or "the path to success is hard" or "thete's no free lunch out there" ... BUT after 10 years as a value-oriented stock picker who's just picked up options trading a few months ago I must say IT'S NOT THAT HARD you just need "a good sets of rules you trade by and stick with it" and "limit your trade size/risk" ... and guys, don't forget: IT'S WALL STREET NOT LAS VEGAS

"But after 10 years as...." 

 

Like a F3 driver saying that driving F1 is easy because he had 10 years experience in F3 and he can control an F1 car 😛

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Guest Set monthly goals.

Posted

This is absolutely possible. If you can get 8.3%(simple) monthly, to double your money annually. But it is absolutely achievable, with accurate position sizing , minimising your losses and rotating your positions, trailing your SL's.

People who can't do that, can buy in to a fund at every dip throughout the year and exit at regular intervals and reinvest the capital.

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