Formula δ1
2.2K posts


I also have a list of people who are genuinely worth following who sometimes reveal actionable edges, obviously it’s a lot shorter x.com/i/lists/184326…





IMO it should be considered quite rude in most contexts to post or send someone a wall of 100% AI-generated text. “Here, read this thing I didn’t care enough about to express myself.”






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Market orders trade price certainty for execution certainty, and limit orders do the reverse. Three reasons to not use market orders for options, and two reasons where market orders make sense: 1. With a market order you are not guaranteed to get the bid/ask you see, it can change at any point, and if it does your fill won't match what you expected. 2. Unless the bid/ask spread is very tight you can often do better than the listed spread by putting in a limit order inside the spread. I usually start a the mid-price point between the bid/ask. This works particularly well with combination orders like spreads/butterflies where you are trading multiple options with multiple strikes/expirations/direction (buy or sell). Mid-price fills are common. 3. If you are trading in size, multiple contracts, then you will likely get fills at different prices, always worse than the quoted bid/ask with a market order. When to use market orders? 1. For very liquid securities that have options with very tight spreads. The bid/ask prices are fluid and there is very low risk that your will get a bad fill 2. In fast markets where you want/need the trade to fill immediately. Chasing a market that is moving away from you with limit orders is a bad idea, the risk is much higher than the potential gain. Limit orders for light traded ETF are often a good practice also. sixfigureinvesting.com/2012/01/tradin…








