RightWingConspirator said:
Yes, but my account is relatively small right now. Most of my money is managed by Merrill and Fidelity, but my trading account has about $50k in it for me to play around in the market some. Selling puts is a great idea if it wasn't for the fact that if the stock is "put" to me, I don't have sufficient capital to pick up 100 shares of a 300-400 dollar stock. At least not yet.
When oil stocks sold off, I started moving more money into my trading account to take advantage. Right now my trading account has a return YTD sitting at ~72%, so I am looking to move more in with a cap at about $100k. I've been fairly methodical and don't want to get too cocky. I've lost my shorts before and would like to avoid that. Wouldn't we all??
For your consideration only, from a 30-year non-professional option trader:
RWC - - he said buying protective puts, which is the opposite of what you're discussing.
Fig - - Starting with covered calls is a good way to learn the mechanics, expirations, the spreads, and trading patterns. The good news is that they actually reduce risk, instead of increasing it, if done correctly.
In most cases, the next frontier in options trading is buying naked puts or calls - - easy to understand, as you have a known downside, and either unlimited upside (calls), or significant upside (puts, in which returns cap out at a theoretical zero value of the underlying stock). Buy calls if you're bullish, buy puts if you're bearish. Select an expiration that gives your investment premise time to materialize. In either case, you can simply place a bet with a small amount you can afford to lose, and either lose it all or have significant gains.
The trick is having an exit strategy, and understand the time decay element of the option (time is your enemy). My general preference is to sell half when a position doubles, and decide what to do from there.
All the advanced strategies get more complex, with the main upside being that you can define a sweet spot where you make money while minimizing risk. The main downside is that you're piling option premiums on top of option premiums (and possibly commissions), which may impact your returns, and you really have to watch them closely to ensure you hit your optimal exit points. Unless you're able to track fairly constantly, you might be better off with a simpler approach.