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Either I really stink at explaining options or I've done just enough to pique people's interest in learning more, because the number of requests for books and options education has been on the upswing this week. Or maybe it's just a function of people facing a rainy holiday weekend and looking for some reading material that will make them both smarter and sleepy.
Another great educational site is Optionetics, which has a variety of screening tools and software. RedOption has a great glossary and a breakdown of some of the popular trading strategies and offers both live and online seminars. Two subscription-based sites also offer free tools. Chartbender.com's educational segment, the Options Knowledge Exchange, has a great scroll-down tool bar that peels back to explain in both text and graphics the pricing behavior and profit/loss of various strategies during given time frames and volatility environments. The other is iVoltillity.com, which as the name implies focuses on volatility data. It offers free, though delayed, information on all listed options, and it has some basic tools such as an option calculator and most-active lists. For more advanced traders it offers a broad and deep suite of screening tools and historical data software. As for books, you can't have a reading list without putting Sheldon Natenberg's Option Volatility and Pricing: Advanced Trading Strategies and Techniques at the top. This is a classic, and it covers all the concepts and strategies without agendas or false promises. One of my personal favorites is The Option Traders Handbook, by Jabbour and Budwick. It's written by two active and practicing option traders who came from other professions, namely law and law, and they combine a disciplined learning process with great analogies and real life examples.
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Steven Smith writes regularly for TheStreet.com. In keeping with TSC's editorial policy, he doesn't own or short individual stocks. He also doesn't invest in hedge funds or other private investment partnerships. He was a seatholding member of the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) and the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) from May 1989 to August 1995. During that six-year period, he traded multiple markets for his own personal account and acted as an executing broker for third-party accounts. He appreciates your feedback; click here to send him an email.To read more of Steve Smith's options ideas take a free trial to TheStreet.com Options Alerts.
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