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Avoid These 6 Options Trading Mistakes

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As investors await earnings from the likes of “Microsoft (MSFT)” and Twitter (TWTR),” new traders are chomping on the Robinhood platform to get a piece of the action. I’m going to be playing TWTR using an options strategy called a double diagonal in my Options360 Service but this may be too complicated for newcomers going it alone. My advice is to get some options trading education, which is widely available all over the world wide web.

Ideally, no single position should represent more than 5% of a portfolio. My personal options account typically carries six to 10 positions at a time. These can run from complex, multi-strike hedged positions that have four to six months until expiration, to speculative plays based on unusual activity or an upcoming event that will be held for just a few days. Why? Because again, I never want to get knocked out of the game on one trade or allow a position to get so large that it could threaten gains elsewhere in the portfolio if things go south. When people go broke trading options, it’s usually because they not only swung for the fences but put far too much money into that single trade.

To learn more about Steve Smith’s unique trading approach, and access to his highly-acclaimed Options360 course, click here.

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