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un bon livre sur les options

par apj » 04 juin 2018 19:48

Bonsoir les optionneurs

Voulant me perfectionner sur les options, je viens de parcourir le net à la recherche du livre qu'il faudrait avoir pour devenir un solide trader d'options. :musique:

A votre avis est ce utile de se procurer ce genre de lecture ?

Sinon ou se documenter ?

Si oui, entre ces 2 livres avez vous un avis :
- Options, futures et autres dérivés
de John HULL (10eme édition, 2017)
- Pricing et volatilité des options
de Sheldon Natenberg (édition 2010, la dernière ?)

Un autre livre ?

Merci de vos avis éclairés ;)

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par gribouille » 04 juin 2018 20:01

bonjour apj,

Le Hull est très complet mais complexe et plus orienté "math" (j'ai la 7ème édition). J'ai trouvé le Natenberg très bien (version française) et utilisable assez rapidement pour fabriquer ses propres outils.
Il y a aussi Lee Lowell qui est très simple pour débuter.

Bon courage !

jlr

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par Chouini l'ourson » 04 juin 2018 20:32

+1 pour le natenberg
Le livre est bien, il te donne une base mais ensuite, il faut observer, tester en démo, et poser des questions quand on ne comprend pas: c'est ça le mieux.
A bientôt au mile des strangles et des straddles :top:

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par ladefense92800 » 04 juin 2018 20:45

Pour moi : le vizzanova et le Hull sont trop académiques .le Lee Lowell est superbe et très inspirant . pour la version anglaise google est ton ami .y a une version française mais a 50 € je trouve ça un peu abusé.

Sinon ben you tube . l algo va bosser pour toi et tu te verras proposer des vidéos bien pertinentes .par contre faut bien comprendre l anglais , en français y a rien .

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par Chouini l'ourson » 04 juin 2018 21:55

Le Lee Lowell est bien pour une première approche, dommage qu'il soit traduit avec les pieds :evil:

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par gribouille » 04 juin 2018 23:06

Chouini l'ourson a écrit :Le Lee Lowell est bien pour une première approche, dommage qu'il soit traduit avec les pieds :evil:
+1 :cry:

Je n'ai pas du tout accroché avec le Vizzavona. Celui qui m'a fait comprendre pas mal de choses est bien le Natenber.
Et après, comme le dit Chouini, il faut pratiquer !

jlr

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par ladefense92800 » 05 juin 2018 11:23

Voici le commentaire amazon qui m a fait m intéressé au Lowell .

Spoiler:
First I'm a doer, not a talker and that's why I write this only after two-year successful full time trading utilizing concepts of this book. You'll never make any money by talking,or paper trading, or "back testing". No, I didn't do any of these at all. Day one to five read three books including this and get the applicable concepts out of them, don't think negatively. And Day Six put the real money into first trade, supplement your learning by doing, by making mistake. Boy, I'm 54, not much time left to talk.

I have an MBA Finance degree 20 years ago but never put it in practical use. After reading this book but without much urge to make big bucks initially. Adding two other useful books plus my financial sense I immediately started trading options 2 years ago, strictly on Selling side, strictly Credit Spreads, again, no paper trading that takes emotional aspect away so the paper results are faulty. After paying for some costly mistakes at the beginning (April to October 2011) so far I'm doing very good with 250%/400% annual returns. I know for this past 24 months I had good timing with surging SP500 and the bears hasn't come back yet but I'm very well prepared for that(I trade and study every weekday). Here's my opinions about the book: I generally agree with other reviews that rate this book 3 or 4 stars and found these readers are the ones who not only have solid knowledge and experiences but objectively evaluate this book and try hard to give potential reader/buyers reasonable advice.
Credits to this book: 1) on selling side, with controlled risk; 2) simple, easy strategies to be implemented,you don't have to understand WSJ to get ideas from the book; 3)more details on credit spread strategies that made author most of his fortune; 4) Real experience from a former floor trader, the neutral-biased mmkr story helps me understand unique behavior of some ETFs or big cap stocks on expiration date.
My trades primarily are for weekly options on ETFs, so I can have a worry-free weekend with my family and pay little attention to company's earning surprises or weather in FL (OJ,yes you're right). I do this on full time basis. I realize that in order to get "rich" you need to at least be able to draw income consistently every month, if not every week, to support your family as first step, do it part time is not possible.
As critic of this book, like other reviews, the book definitely is an incomplete material, the very important part of serious trading - "position sizing" never mentioned. If you're like me 2 years ago without working knowledge on options, and commodity futures this book could lead you into disaster because of the urge caused by author's mentioning "Get Rich..." oh boy, his examples shows only ONE commodity contract in most trades that makes me wondering if these trades were designed to prepare the writing of the book (it will make no sense if these trades lose more money than the royalty received). Why professional traders like Mr. Lowell will ever enter this type of "experimental" trade? If you cannot provide your family with sufficient income consistently, then forget about "get rich with...". In my area on Long Island you can barely call yourself "rich" if you have at least $1 million in liquid assets and a quarter million $ annual income, consistently. So if you have a decent account, say $100k, to start, you have to figure out how to reach the figures i mentioned within 10 years, So average 30% portfolio return per year should be your minimum target to "get rich" if your spouse can support your plan and guarantee "no draw" from your trading account for 10 years. I have no idea how Mr. Lowell can consistently grow his portfolio at 30+% every year under bull, or bear market if the actual trades in the book be performed? So the fact that Mr. Lowell not only survived the 2008/09 market meltdsown but also seems doing very well makes me having another speculation that he has more useful stuffs/skills to be revealed, maybe you need to go into his paid service site to explore or hone yours.
And this is the reason I give the book 3-star: without this book (concepts from real trader) I couldn't have made $ millions within 2 short years including 6 turbulent down months (I started with $120k), but if being with this book ONLY I'd probably have been dead or still struggling. For those newbies who don't have short-term investment/speculation background or finance education(sense) sometimes it won't go wrong if you study one classic Options textbook, 2nd book on technical analysis and the third focusing on risk management, yes, buy this book as your reference after you're well equipped. After all, only "Credit Spread" can potentially assure, in my case, a big fat check coming every Friday at 4:00pm. Friday becomes my "pay day" and best of all, no worry during the weekend, because all positions expires worthless, even better, if your short legs are far reach OTM, you don't need to close it (not recommended, my warning), under normal situation, if you're not too greedy, there's no exit strategies involved, just let all positions (long or short) expired, how good is that? Under prolonged bear market, your doing is no difference from one under Bull market, you only need to be patient and extra-careful when market is uncertain, it only takes one big "gap down" or "gap up" to make you belly up! You don't have to trade every week but still have a fabulous year!

updates: Oct.22, 2013
After the bitterly fight regarding partial government shutdown/Debt debate in DC, I'm finally having time to relax a bit. Any time you have these types of events that moves market violently, you're presented tons of opportunities to cash in these super rich premium! Now I like to give this book an upgraded 4-star. Reasons: As my accounts (total 14 accounts) continues to be exploding, I tried other more advanced strategies to meet different market conditions every week, and to maintain my decent annual return, I've invested $500 on books and seminars, and seemed to have more confidence that I feft like I was one of Goldman Sachs traders. You know what? that mindset made me crazy, I need three stacks of nine 30-in Dell UltraSharp monitors to monitor all legs (whew, iron condor, iron butterfly, straddle, & on & on.....) though I never lost any money at all, but my monthly earnings went down! and my head turned to be crazy nut! In August, I stopped all these advanced strategies, back to the simplest, but well-worked "Vertical Credit Spread", then my performance comes back to 200% annual return level, and I need only 4 monitors to see everything. So my advice to all perspective players: read all reviews here, positive, or negative, doesn't matter, you need to grasp the FACTS, negative comments w/o facts is garbage, positive comments w/o details is cream puff you don't need. Keep everything as simplest as possible, mastering more advanced options trading skills sometimes only make you feel "more professional", but at the end the performance result is the only thing to judge your success, even you only know one strategy and consistently make money, no one will look you down. Also if you decide to trade full time like those 60-something retired IBM engineers/MIT professors, you need to fully understand Options Greeks which are not focused in Lowell book, the Greeks enhance my performance and confidence so much during difficult times that I have to mention it.

More updates 03/09/2014
we had a wonderful year of 2013 and got some headwind in January 2014 as emerging mkt crises. However we still stick to vertical credit spread strategy even we might trade calls and puts in the same week, but it's not "condor" thing at all. As my account values are skyrocketed, I successfully negotiated a deal to partially manage one of the Chinese private funds. I didn't impress them by my sophisticated strategies or knowledge or elite B-school background, just by a simple certified trading records for the past 3 years.

updates on 01/21/2015
we have another spectacular year all accounts have an average 88% to 110% return, this past year S&P500 has only 11% return vs. 2013's 30+%, so the choppy chart and several below 200 DMA line closings had yielded 4 losing weeks for me, plus 4 weeks worldwide travel, I actually had all annual gains from just 36 weeks profits. The expand trading volume and bigger market in 2014 inevitably forced me to register with SEC as Large Trader. Money aside I learned a lot more this year than past 3 years combined. And what makes me happy is the confidence I've built since 2011 after reading Lowell's book, and I now can say I'm in charge of my family's future. Indeed I'm in a situation I can't even imagined years ago and well into the country's top 1%er, and I hate to tell you I switched from democrat to Republican. My wife was so scared when I decided to do this full time and quit job all together now she's fine even seeing I lost $240k in one week last year. What a difference it is! Before April 2011 the most expensive car I'd ever owned was Ford Explorer XLT followed by Toyota Camry LE, now I can skip all the nice luxury category into an Aston Martin V12 Vanquish for myself and a BMW X5 50i M for my wife! Thank you Mr. Lowell, my trading strategy remains the same, and the only one: Credit spread (bullish or bearish).

In a separate note I like to comment on the controversial title "get rich with...", Of all 4 strategies Mr. Lowell introduced, why do I stick on "credit spread" only?? If "getting rich" will ever be possible you need to do what I did. As some reviews state that average Joe, even successfully implements Lowell's strategies, can walk away with only a few hundred bucks though still better than losing or none, but that won't get you into the country's top 10%! (based on IRS survey not all 10%ers are wealthy). Selling one put contract for $10 premium and get assigned to add 100 shares of stock position at desired lower price? WoW. Looking for buying one DITM call and hope the market to go your direction and make nice $100 after a bigger bid/ask slippage? WoW. Traders: any time you need the market to go only one direction to profit you can't put a significant fund out of your account to bet, right? even you make 300% on a Anonyme741 position so what? you might still make only 0.3% portfolio gains! But credit spread is different: it's the ideal strategy to consistently generate monthly, weekly or even daily income! you can profit even market goes against you, well I'm not trying to fool you here as experienced traders know exactly what I'm talking about: as long as you have a solid idea about the underlying price range during a set time frame.

As Mr. Lowell points out: guessing a range is much easier than guessing a price point! That's how you for most of the time can dump 50% to 75%, in some extreme cases, even 100% of all your money into it and win it big! I started trading in April, 2011 with $120k house equity money, after almost 5 years of 88% to 250% annual returns, you can figure out using a scientific calculator how much I've accumulated now! At casino, you may win big a couple of times, but I've never heard of any gambler generating 100+% annual gains year by year w/o cheating. In security trading world, I'd say credit spread strategy makes it possible. So remember what Mr. Lowell stresses in his book this strategy(credit spread) is HIS FAVORITE and the one that makes most of his fortune, digest this then you probably won't be so upset by the title.
Je connaissait déjà la version française j avait dû la feuilleter a eyrolles a Paris et ça m avait paru un trop fouillis .et le prix 50 €.la version en anglais est abordable pour un niveau d'anglais moyen suffit de rester concentré .

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par Chouini l'ourson » 05 juin 2018 12:11

La version originale est peut-être de qualité (je ne sais pas) mais en tout cas, le problème de la version française vient de la traduction...et de la personne qui l'a faite que je ne citerai pas pour ne pas attirer de problème à qui que ce soit.

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par ladefense92800 » 06 juin 2018 14:20

Et pour l'avoir feuilleté , de mémoire , les graphiques sont très mal reproduits.

Mais ça a le mérite d exister , c était a l époque ou le numérique avait pas encore tue le livre . 2004 2005 2006 .la maison d édition a rendu l'âme depuis .il y en avait deux d ailleurs valor et Édouard valys .

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par gribouille » 06 juin 2018 14:25

Chouini l'ourson a écrit :La version originale est peut-être de qualité (je ne sais pas) mais en tout cas, le problème de la version française vient de la traduction...et de la personne qui l'a faite que je ne citerai pas pour ne pas attirer de problème à qui que ce soit.
On est du même avis .... :mercichinois:

jlr

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par apj » 15 juin 2018 18:26

Merci pour vos retours, commandé le Sheldon Natenberg

:merci:

Re: un bon livre sur les options

par gribouille » 15 juin 2018 18:52

BonneS lectureS 8-)

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