Advanced Selling Masterclass
Defensive Management: The Art of Survival
What happens when the stock breaks through your "Roof"? We teach you how to roll the ratio (swapping intrinsic for extrinsic value) and how to use "Stop-Loss Conversions" to automate your defense.
Rolling the Ratio: Swapping Value
When the stock moves against you, you must adjust. The primary tool is Rolling.
Roll Up: If stock rallies, buy back your ITM calls (realizing a loss) and sell higher strike calls. You are buying back "Intrinsic Value" (Real Loss) and selling "Time Value" (Thin Air).
Roll Down: If stock tanks, roll down to lower strikes. This generates more credit, reducing your cost basis and widening the downside breakeven.
Stop-Loss Conversions: The "Robot" Method
You can automate your defense using Stop orders on the Stock, not the options.
Upside Defense (Buy Stop): Place a Buy Stop for 100 shares at your Upside Breakeven. If triggered, your Ratio Write (Short 2 Calls) becomes a Covered Call (Long 200 Shares, Short 2 Calls). Risk is capped.
Downside Defense (Sell Stop): Place a Sell Stop for 100 shares at your Downside Breakeven. If triggered, your Ratio Write becomes a Naked Call. You cut the stock loss, and if the stock keeps falling, the naked calls profit.
Telescoping: Locking in the Win
If the trade goes well and the stock stays in the profit zone, don't just sit there.
Telescoping involves moving your defensive points (Stops or Roll-points) closer together as expiration approaches.
By narrowing your range, you "lock in" the paper profit. If the stock breaks out late in the game, you exit with a guaranteed profit rather than giving it back.
Key takeaways
- Roll Up or Down to re-center your profit tent.
- Swap Intrinsic Value (loss) for Extrinsic Value (potential) when rolling.
- Use Stock Stop Orders to automatically convert your Ratio Write into a Covered Call or Naked Call.
- Telescope your stops to lock in profits as expiration nears.
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Advanced Selling Masterclass
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