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Question about Volume in trading Options, stocks,Futures?

Monday Sep 14, 2009

Hello Everbody,

Can anyone please tell me what is the Good amount of volume (Minimum) to do Day trading for the following:
a.Options Trading
b.Futures Trading
c.Straight stock trading.

Please answer my question clearly.Also, if you feel like you need to provide any additioanl information or advice or suggestion for the question i asked, Please write that also.I appreciate your help.

Have a Good day Guys.
Thank You.

it depends on how is yor cash flow & cash in hand also.
after that how much money u left for shares
from money for shares amount- at present mkt situation u tread ononly 25% only.

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Is this stock and option trade considered a wash loss?

Monday Sep 14, 2009

I bought a stock and call and put on it. I made a profit on the stock and took a loss on a call and put option. If I buy the stock and different put and call option strike prices within 30 days, is it considered a wash for my options losses for tax purposes?

Good question. Pub 550 deals specifically with straddles.

Coordination of Loss Deferral Rules and Wash Sale Rules

Rules similar to the wash sale rules apply to any disposition of a position or positions of a straddle. First apply Rule 1, explained next, then apply Rule 2. However, Rule 1 applies only if stocks or securities make up a position that is part of the straddle. If a position in the straddle does not include stock or securities, use Rule 2.
Rule 1. You cannot deduct a loss on the disposition of shares of stock or securities that make up the positions of a straddle if, within a period beginning 30 days before the date of that disposition and ending 30 days after that date, you acquired substantially identical stock or securities. Instead, the loss will be carried over to the following tax year, subject to any further application of Rule 1 in that year. This rule will also apply if you entered into a contract or option to acquire the stock or securities within the time period described above. See Loss carryover, later, for more information about how to treat the loss in the following tax year.

Example.

You are not a dealer in stock or securities. On December 2, 2006, you bought stock in XX Corporation (XX stock) and an offsetting put option. On December 13, 2006, there was $20 of unrealized gain in the put option and you sold the XX stock at a $20 loss. By December 16, the value of the put option had declined, eliminating all unrealized gain in the position. On December 16, you bought a second XX stock position that is substantially identical to the XX stock you sold on December 13. At the end of the year there is no unrecognized gain in the put option or in the XX stock. Under these circumstances, the $20 loss will be disallowed for 2006 under Rule 1 because, within a period beginning 30 days before December 13, and ending 30 days after that date, you bought stock substantially identical to the XX stock you sold.

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Requirements of volume in options, futures trading?

Monday Sep 14, 2009

Hello Everbody,

Can anyone please tell me what is the Good amount of volume (Minimum) to do Day trading for the following:
a.Options Trading( Min Volume or Min Open Interest or Min whatever?)
b.Futures Trading ( " Same as above ")
c.Straight stock trading.(Min Volume)

Please answer my question clearly.Also, if you feel like you need to provide any additioanl information or advice or suggestion for the question i asked, Please write that also.I appreciate your help.

Have a Good day Guys.
Thank You.

Liquidity is relative your YOUR volume. If you are trading onesies and have patience to wait 10-20 minutes for a fill, most contracts are liquid. If you are trading ten lots and want instantaneous fills, you better be in something that has lots of volume and then stick with busy hours. And liquidity varies by time of day, so daily volumes mean less than you think. Oil is liquid at almost any size from 7am to 2:30. US stocks liquid from 9:30 to 4, and sometimes earlier. TBOnds good from 7am to noon. But I am a small lot trader. Trading even a single emini at 9pm is silly, and trading euros after 1pm is sometimes treacherous.

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When buying stock options, what do the choices "To Open" and "To Close" mean?

Monday Sep 14, 2009

I recently started trading stock options, and I noticed the other day that when you go to make a trade, you also have the choice of buying options either "To Open" or "To Close". What do these mean?

To open is to buy the option. To close is to sell the option. Note- you are not exercising right to owning the underlying security, you are just selling the option. Which is a good thing.

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What should I day Trade?

Monday Sep 14, 2009

Hi I am a finance major who has spent a lot of time studying stocks, futures, forex and options.. I want to try out some of the technical analysis I have been studying and was wondering which would be the best to trade?

If you’re a finance major, you should have learned by now that day trading is a terrible idea. On average, any gains you make will be totally negated by transaction costs.

Also, I don’t think technical analysis is designed to be applied to the extremely short time intervals involved in day trading. Head and shoulders formations mean nothing in the span of 4 minutes.

Go read "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton G. Malkiel. It will put the stuff you learn in finance class in a real world perspective that will keep you from doing silly stuff like day trading.

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