unless you actually want to get it filled.
might be a charge for it, but I'd imagine ivolatility.com has it
you can use it whenever you want, you just have to realize what happens when you put that qualifier on your order. I personally would only do it...
I also should have mentioned that AON orders are not reflected in the current quote, so if you have an AON order that is better than the current...
you'll be a lot better off not using AON, especially if you're just trading 10 contracts. putting AON on your order makes it "not held" and...
nah, can't go lower than .05 and yeah sometimes you can sell a long position at the cabinet price
Ok, I see what you meant now. It still really depends on your outlook for the underlying stock. I'm not really big on just buying a long put...
premium from covered calls should be available for trading right away and for withdrawal the next day. provided this isn't an IRA, or proceeds...
huh? didn't you decide to buy the March 20 puts? It depends on what you're buying them for. A speculative move that the underlying will fall...
not a bad idea I think you mean notify not to exercise, can't tell them not to assign. you get assigned when you're short ITM, and...
probably one that had a sizable increase in IV
VIX @ 50 is pretty manageable, eh? I'd say this is a pretty volatile environment we're in now. Sept-Nov was extreme
it's simple, all one needs to do is follow one of those infomercial programs...you're 100% correct
I'd look for a new broker. I'm about 99% sure that it's not the clearing firm that is holding the premium out on you.
the premium received should be available for you to use. are these calls in the money? if so then what they are probably doing is basically...
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