Article Archive For
Joe Luisi
The Expiration Trade by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...In this world of algorithmic trading, how can an independent trader stand a chance?
Here's one way you can trade options to get an edge in the markets.
We have all heard that 70% to 80% of all options expire worthless. Many of us have
purchased options, only to watch the market move in the direction we anticipate
and still lose money as the option we bought drops to zero. I'm not sure whether
the percentage of options that
expire worthless is correct and
there have been articles published
about that statement in general,
but the one thing I do know is
that all out-of-the-m...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: FEB 2011SUBJECT: Options
10 Rules For Options Traders by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...10 Rules For Options Traders by Joe Luisi
The success of your trading career is determined by
profitability. And this profitability lies in the way you
follow your trading plan. Here are 10 rules you
should always consider before making a trade.
It's a good idea to take some time each
year to reflect on your trading successes
and failures. What have you done right?
What have you done wrong? Did your
trades work out as planned? Did you
make money? Don't let another year go
by with failed dreams and hopes. Make this your year of
change and financial advancement, one that offers many
profitable...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: MAR 2002SUBJECT: Options
Options Or Stops? by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Options Or Stops? by Joe Luisi
Options may cost less and give you more flexibility than outright stops. Here's how to choose between options and stops and some ways of using both throughout the life of the trade.
Stops are essential, but they don't have to be orders to buy or sell stock or futures. Options are sometimes preferable to futures or stocks, due to their limited
risk:if you own them, you can only lose the cost of the option. Here 's how to go about it.
Once you take a futures position either buying or selling, you should place a stop to get you out of the market if your analysis ...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: NOV 2000SUBJECT: Options
Let Options Pay For Your Stops by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Let Options
Pay For Your
Stops by Joe Luisi
Want to get into positions with good risk-return ratios and
firm boundaries of gain and loss? Look no further: Here's a
technique for having it all -- or most of it, anyway.
You know you should use stops,
but they cause losses, don't
they? Would you use stops if
you could minimize or even
erase those losses by selling
options? Would stops look better to you then?
Sooner or later, every trader
comes to realize that he needs
to use stops. It doesn't matter if
you're a short-term trader or a longer-term trader; stops are
essential for the preservation ...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: MAR 2000SUBJECT: Options
Playing TRIX: The Triple Exponential Smoothing Oscillator by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Playing TRIX: The Triple Exponential Smoothing Oscillator by Joe Luisi
Here's a look at a tried-and-true favorite, an oscillator that traders can use to determine the trend of the market.
With each technical analysis software package comes a host of technical indicators, yet more often than not, the manual accompanying the package only provides a series of one-page guidelines describing how to use each indicator. So here's a more in-depth look at a particular indicator that's often found in those packages, one that for the most part is overlooked but has a real use for the technician:
The ...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: JUN 1997SUBJECT: Novice Traders' Notebook
The Stochastic Oscillator by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...The stochastic oscillator is one of the more popular indica-tors
available on today's software. This technical tool tells
you where the current closing price is relative to the recent
range of the market. Here are some techniques for using this
classic indicator.
First introduced by George Lane in
the 1970s, the stochastic indicator
has become one of the more
popular technical indicators
around. Pages upon pages have
been devoted to explaining the
indicator and how it works. Further,
just about every technical
analysis software product available
today offers this indicator.
The stochastic osc...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: DEC 1997SUBJECT: Novice Traders' Notebook
Avoiding False Signals by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Some people may think that technical analysis doesn't work anymore, but here's one author's
solutions to today's challenging modern markets.
by Joe Luisi
Having been involved with technical trading for several years, I've noticed that technical analysis doesn't seem to
hold the same promise it once did. Indicators and patterns that were once tried and true are no longer reliable; false
signals and breakouts occur more frequently. Frequent stop running causes moves that seem to make no sense. Over
the years, with computers having become so inexpensive, and data, either real time or delayed, re...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: SEP 1996
Charting Equity by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Charting Equity by Joe Luisi
Technicians apply technical analysis to charts for trading decisions. This technician applies similar techniques to his trading system results.
When asked what the key to long-term trading success is, successful traders always reply that money
management is foremost. Professional traders often advise trading hopefuls that 70% of their time should be spent on money management and 30% on searching for low-risk, high-profit trading opportunities. Sounds reasonable, right? It does, but there's a flaw in this reasoning. Information on money management, what it is and ...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: MAY 1996
Trendlines as a Technical Tool by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...NOVICE TRADER
Trendlines As A Technical
Tool
Applying trendlines to charts is a classic form of analysis. Here are some of the
basics of using this tool.
by Joe Luisi
Trendlines, which are one of the most basic techniques in chart analysis, are lines drawn to portray market
direction and even project where the market is going. A trendline? connects either a series of highs or a series of
lows in a trend. It can represent either support?, as in an uptrend line, or resistance?, as in a downtrend line.
(Consolidations are marked by horizontal trendlines.) Trendlines can provide visually orie...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: MAR 1996
On Using Stops by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...V. 14:1 (45-49): On Using Stops by Joe Luisi
Stop orders are used to manage risk and to enter and exit positions. But what are some of the methods you can use to do so? For a look at the basics plus some of
the finer points, read on.
Say your favorite indicator flashes a buy signal. You proceed to call your broker and enter the market. Then what do you do? Do you just sit back and wait for the profits to roll in? What happens if the market falls apart and it turns out you're facing a big loss? Getting into a trade is the easy part; learning how to protect and manage the trade is the hard par...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: JAN 1996SUBJECT: Novice Traders' Notebook
On Range Trading by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...On Range Trading by Joe Luisi
Markets move from trading ranges to trends and back into trading ranges. Presented here are methods to identify the trading opportunities based on identifying trading ranges.
Each time you look at a chart, you probably see trading opportunities because the practiced eye easily takes notes of the trading ranges and the trends between them. But it's not always easy to tell when a breakout from a trading range is simply a temporary move or the first step in a trend. Understanding how to examine a market range can help traders better analyze and trade the markets th...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: DEC 1995
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: APR 1993
Trading The Equity Curve by Joe Luisi
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS ...Trading The Equity Curve by Joe Luisi
Technical analysis is typically applied to prices to determine the trend and changes in the trend. Now consider applying the same concept to analyzing your equity curve to determine those times when your equity may not be trending in the preferred direction.
Money management may be the single most important aspect in trading, but few traders spend the
necessary time required for successful trading. Generally, it is a rule of thumb that traders should spend
30% of their time analyzing the markets and 70% of their time split between looking for low-risk,
...
AUTHOR: Joe LuisiDATE: OCT 1992