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Replying to @himbodhisattva @nickcammarata
🤷🏻♀️ Retweeted 🤷🏻♀️
take a look at this. to make money it’s got to clear $170.24. if
$AAPL is $180, each will make $1000. it’s$AAPL is $148 now and rising quickly.https://twitter.com/DanielleFong/status/1450594468860674049 …🤷🏻♀️ added,
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Replying to @DanielleFong @nickcammarata
I feel like there are many much harder to justify prices out there than
$AAPL at $171!1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @himbodhisattva @nickcammarata
haha what you mean
$NKLA at $10
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learning in public - could someone eli5 my payment obligations in the pic? I’m fine paying $24 on a gamble but not $170 x 100 sharespic.twitter.com/5LGKTr9PhW
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oh, in this picture you’re buying! you have $0 obligations, other than you have to purchase the option at a $24 ticket price! the person who’s selling you the option is liable for a lot if the price goes up past $170. i don’t think individual investors should do this!
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Replying to @DanielleFong @strangestloop and
the only case where they could is as writing a covered call, where if they have 100 shares already they sell the option to sell them at a $170 strike price. that would make some sense. selling naked calls on this is probably a bad idea!
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interesting - well i’ll learn more by doing ty
pic.twitter.com/3JyDxvhiab
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Replying to @strangestloop @DanielleFong and
woah hey y’all this is so cool!? so we could sell each contract we bought for $24 yesterday for $26 now? since the market has judged the $170-share-price-by-11/26 event as more likely to happen? am i understanding this all correctly?pic.twitter.com/ApNy3wTv94
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yes, I think? there are way more knowledgeable people in this thread but I think this is now "in the money"
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the option is worth more, and you could sell at a profit, but i think the technical term in the money means that the currect price of the underlying security, $aapl, is worth more than the strike price, $170, which it is not
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Replying to @DanielleFong @himbodhisattva and
ye as
@DanielleFong said: "in the money" means that price > strike (in other words, that executing the option and immediately selling the stock received gives a profit) atm the option is "out of the money," but its *premium* (the price of the option itself) has increased1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @GuilleAngeris @DanielleFong and
thank you! learning the vocab is hard
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