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Advanced Risk Reversals P.O.T Class Series – The Poor
Advanced Risk Reversals P.O.T Class Series – The Poor
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Description
This is the definitive manual on Risk Reversals, but with a twist. By a slight manipulation of strike prices, one can create a directional position where you only have to be right for a short period of time. Once the underlying moves one or more strike prices, the trader can adjust the position to create a trade with little to no risk.
From there the market can sit, move higher, or move lower, and your position will be safe. Better yet, though, you also have the opportunity to tweak things whereby you can have on a directional play. In short, you can flip from bullish to bearish, and back again – without adding risk or cost the whole time. And the best part, this can be done again, and again in choppy markets that just swing around. This is perfect for stocks, indexes or commodities in a channel. Or you can leave the bullish (or bearish) bet on.
How cool is that?
This complete manual comes loaded with JL Lord’s famous step-by-step criteria. Nothing is left to guess. Not enough? This is a strategy that can be exploited in any market condition, and even used to hedge a stock position.
Material
This material was originally presented a class taught by Scott in Maui last January 2016 with the book title of STRATAGEM.  Since then, we broke down the STRATAGEM text into the book’s two topics—Advanced Risk Reversals and Rolling Thunder—in order to allow the student to purchase ONLY what he wants to learn. This is not a cut up textbook, the book is a complete manual from start to end.
Advanced Risk Reversal Videos
Augmenting the text are clips from our popular Practical Option Tactics (POT) class.
Our POT class shows examples of trades that could possibly work out in varying market conditions: bull markets, bear markets, high volatility, low volatility, etc. When we dedicate calls to an Advanced Risk Reversal example, it becomes part of a volume.
What better way to augment the textbook than seeing examples in an online classroom environment? The classes are edited to cut out the unrelated material so that you can focus on the meat.
Stock trading course: Learn about Stock trading
A stock trader or equity trader or share trader is a person or company involved in trading equity securities.
Stock traders may be an agent, hedger, arbitrageur, speculator, stockbroker.
Such equity trading in large publicly traded companies may be through a stock exchange.
Stock shares in smaller public companies may be bought and sold in over-the-counter (OTC) markets.
Stock traders can trade on their own account, called proprietary trading, or through an agent authorized to buy and sell on the owner’s behalf.
Trading through an agent is usually through a stockbroker. Agents are paid a commission for performing the trade.
Major stock exchanges have market makers who help limit price variation (volatility) by buying and selling a particular company’s shares on their own behalf and also on behalf of other clients.
What is forex?
Quite simply, it’s the global market that allows one to trade two currencies against each other.
If you think one currency will be stronger versus the other, and you end up correct, then you can make a profit.
If you’ve ever traveled to another country, you usually had to find a currency exchange booth at the airport, and then exchange the money you have in your wallet into the currency of the country you are visiting.
Foreign Exchange
You go up to the counter and notice a screen displaying different exchange rates for different currencies.
An exchange rate is the relative price of two currencies from two different countries.
You find “Japanese yen” and think to yourself, “WOW! My one dollar is worth 100 yen?! And I have ten dollars! I’m going to be rich!!!”
When you do this, you’ve essentially participated in the forex market!
You’ve exchanged one currency for another.
Or in forex trading terms, assuming you’re an American visiting Japan, you’ve sold dollars and bought yen.
Currency Exchange
Before you fly back home, you stop by the currency exchange booth to exchange the yen that you miraculously have left over (Tokyo is expensive!) and notice the exchange rates have changed.
It’s these changes in the exchange rates that allow you to make money in the foreign exchange market.
Salepage : Advanced Risk Reversals P.O.T Class Series – The Poor
More From Categories : Stock – Bond trading
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