Darc Knight
Investor not Trader
- Joined
- 28 February 2015
- Posts
- 1,211
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- 607
Forgive me if I'm asking for your secrets but how many people here are lurking all cashed up waiting to swoop in when this market crashes like some are expecting it to?
I thought about it a year or so ago, so lucky I didn't "cash up* back then.
A lot of people try to go in on the dips and lighten up later on. I've got a mate that does...and as far as I know, it's paid off for him (but you never know for sure).
Personally, I'm 100% invested, 100% of the time...so it's not something I look to do.
I am pretty much all in, the cash holding I have at the moment are for other purposes eg. living expenses and savings for a new car I have on order.
However, if there was a big decline, I would be seeking to take advantage of it by drawing on some debt, writing put options, and using dividends and put options premiums to by some more stock.
Depends on whether they are naked or covered puts being written. If they are naked and OTM, and price of the underlying shares plummet below the exercise price, it could turn bad, fast, and you would need to provide the cash to buy the shares should the options get exercised. On the other hand, if they are covered puts, you would be short the underlying shares hoping that the price moves down to, but not exceed the exercise price, to collect the premium and the capital gain on your short position. Once the share price is lower than the strike price, they are ITM and the money made on the short position is counteracted by the money lost on the option. Therefore, you could use the short position to finance the terms of the option should the need arise.Hi,
if you are writing put options and they get exercised, you will still be required to stump up the cash to buy the stock will you not?
Hi,
if you are writing put options and they get exercised, you will still be required to stump up the cash to buy the stock will you not?
$1960 options premium + the accumulated dividends over the 12 months
You collect the CBA divs over that 12 months for the puts you sold?
Lets say you don't have any spare funds to invest at the moment, But you have an existing portfolio that pays dividends every 6 months, and you could draw on a margin loan if you really wanted to invest (but you want cheaper prices before you do that).
CBA is $73.00 today, but you think thats a little expensive and not worth drawing from your margin loan.
So you can just wait for the months to tick by and wait for some dividend checks to come in and hope CBA price falls
or, you can be a bit more active, and sell a put in anticipation of your future dividends coming in.
No I am referring to the dividends from the existing portfolio
You guys are pretty smart right? You'll tell me to get out before this supposed crash hits, right?
You guys are pretty smart right? You'll tell me to get out before this supposed crash hits, right?
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