Download PDF How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan
Warum stellen wir diese Publikation für Sie? Wir sicher, dass das ist, was Sie beabsichtigen, heraus zu überprüfen. Dies ist das richtige Buch für Ihre Lesung Produkt in letzter Zeit diesen Moment. Durch die Anordnung dieser Publikation unten, bestätigt es, dass wir Sie ständig die richtige Veröffentlichung geben, die unter der Gesellschaft erforderlich ist. Nie Zweifel immer mit dem How I Learned To Trade Like Tom Sosnoff And Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies And Insights, By Tony Rihan Warum? Sie werden wissen nicht nur, wie diese Veröffentlichung wirklich ist, bevor es bis Sie die vollständige Überprüfung.
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan
Download PDF How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan
Kommen Sie folgen uns täglich, genau zu erkennen, was Publikationen täglich aktualisiert. Sie wissen, Guides, die wir von Tag zu Tag präsentieren sicherlich aktualisiert. Neben jetzt, werden wir Ihnen die neue Veröffentlichung geben, die Verweisung sein kann. Sie könnten wählen Sie How I Learned To Trade Like Tom Sosnoff And Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies And Insights, By Tony Rihan als das Buch jetzt zu überprüfen. Warum sollte diese Veröffentlichung sein? Dies ist eines der neuesten Buchsammlungen auf dieser Website zu aktualisieren. Das Buch ist zusätzlich wegen der festen Gründen empfohlen, die verschiedenen Personen machen wie als Lesematerial zu verwenden.
Produktinformation
Taschenbuch: 252 Seiten
Verlag: Antonio\Rihan; Auflage: 1 (24. Oktober 2013)
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN-10: 0615857884
ISBN-13: 978-0615857886
Größe und/oder Gewicht:
15,2 x 1,4 x 22,9 cm
Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
Schreiben Sie die erste Bewertung
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
Nr. 32.733 in Fremdsprachige Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Fremdsprachige Bücher)
I would only recommend this book to someone who watches Tastytrade programming. It's more of a collection of pointers presented during Tastytrade's programs.It reads like someone took notes while watching Tastytrade programs like Market Measures and Tasty Bites and then published their notebook. For example, the stand-alone sentence on page 3, "You can still create time decay while buying a debit spread." No context, no explanation. Just a statement. I was also disappointed by the chapter on pot odds.It will serve as a useful reference for frequent Tastytrade viewers but do not use this book by itself as a means to learn or develop trading strategies.For those not familier with Tastytrade, it's the best option out there for learning options trading, and it's free. Their methodology for those who are learning to trade options or with small account balances (under $25K) is simple:1 - Sell $1-wide option spreads on stocks with a) a price between $15 and $50 (stocks above $50 typically don't have dollar-increment strikes in their options chain) b) a Current IV Percentile above 50 (also called IV Rank, you can find this stat on the ThinkorSwim or their dough platform)and the options should be c) penny-increment options for liquidity d) around 45 days to expiration to "give yourself time to be right" (meaning if a trade goes bad it will have time to turn around) e) have about a 70% probability of expiring out-of-the-money (another stat available on the ThinkorSwim and dough platforms)2 - Manage winners, not losers, meaning if you get a decent profit (50% to 75% of max profit) take it off but give losers time to turn around.3 - Above all else, TRADE SMALL (single-contract spreads on dollar-wide strikes for the first couple years) so your losing trades don't lose you that much and TRADE OFTEN so the higher number of occurrences gets the "law of large numbers" theory to work in your favor (have a lot of trades on at any given time as your account balance allows, while not having more than half your account value at risk at any given time). Your long-run odds of success are much better if you routinely risk $70 on each of ten trades than $700 on one trade.For example, you sell $1-wide spreads that expire in 45 days collecting 30 cents ($30) which gives you 70 cents ($70) of risk on each trade. With a $2,000 account you can have $1,000/$70 or 14 trades on at a time. When your "P/L Open" (profit since opening the trade) is up $20 to $25 close the position (the old saying "a bird in the hand...") and go on to the next trade.
Content is exactly what I was looking for - a summary of many of the common options strategies used by Tom and Tony.However, if any give this book more than a 2-star review. Seriously thought about giving it 1.It feels no editor ever reviewed the book before publishing it. The amount of mistakes is frightening. Not only language mistakes, but conceptual mistakes. The number of times the author wanted to say "call" but said "put" instead is impressive. That's definitely not something that could pass unnoticed on an editorial review, especially if the core of the book is about explaining very precisely how and when to use calls or puts!
I don't think I am normally prone to hyperbole, but this is the best options book I have ever read. I bought Book 2 first, and have been so impressed that I went back and bought Book 1. From the unreadable to the unusable, every kind of options book exists out there in the libraries, bookstores and websites of the world. Most are junk. This is the first one that actually gives you strategies, methods, tips, and insights on what to do from your first trade to a full portfolio. Understand that the material is not about conventional options thinking -- there is nothing about buying, only selling options. And some can get a little complicated. But spend a little time with Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battisita at tastytrade.com, and you will see why. IMHO these guys are the best, widely-known traders on the planet (with John Carter at Simpleroptions.com) and Tony Rihan captures all their very best thinking. Read and you will never trade options the same way again.Yes, I loved the book (and read it in one sitting), and, no, I do not know any of these people nor have any connection with them -- other than loving to trade.Trade well and prosper!
Both books are great. Sir Isaac Newton said it best: "If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants". What a better and faster way to gain the combined knowledge of two of the industry most decorated options experts (Tom Sosnoff & Tony Battista). In these two parts series, Book 1 teaches you how to fish like a fisherman (The Strategies). Book 2 teaches you how to think like a fisherman (The Insights). Tony Rihan did a great job by capturing their minds. Highly recommended.Samuel Kamara (Samelco Investments Pty Ltd)
I believe every tasty trader out there should read this book. Tony Rihan nails down both the bat and Tom! It is a great companion to our daily tastytrade show. You can follow Tony's trades on dough. He does what he preaches. Or should I say Tony does what the Bat and Sosnoff preach?
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan PDF
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan EPub
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan Doc
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan iBooks
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan rtf
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan Mobipocket
How I learned to trade like Tom Sosnoff and Tony Battista: Book Two. Advanced Strategies and Insights, by Tony Rihan Kindle
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar