Hughes Optioneering

March 9, 2017

Top Trading Strategies for 2017
Weekly Paycheck Strategy

By: Chuck Hughes

In this video the Hughes Optioneering Team will explore one of their Top Trading Strategies for 2017 called the Weekly Paycheck Strategy. The Weekly Paycheck Strategy generates weekly cash income from the sale of call options on ETFs. We get to keep this weekly cash income and spend it anyway we want regardless of what happens to the price movement of the underlying ETF.

We will look at an actual example of the weekly paycheck strategy that is generating a 207% cash payout for the Energy ETF symbol ERX.

We use three criteria for selecting ETFs for cash payouts

 

  1. The ETF trades weekly options
  2. The ETF’s option premium gives you at least a 1 to 2% weekly cash payout from selling at the money calls
  3. The price of the ETF is trending up with the 1-Month Price above the 10-Month SMA

A Lot Can Go Wrong and We Will Still Profit

When you generate a 207% ‘Cash on Cash’ return a lot can go wrong and you will still profit:

  • The Energy ETF could decline substantially and you could still profit
  • If you had bad timing on entering the trade you could still profit
  • There could be volatile price swings in ERX and you could still profit

Learn how this strategy delivers substantial returns with virtually no risk.

 

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Futures, stocks, bonds, currency and options trading involves high risks with the potential for substantial losses.

PLEASE READ. Past results are not necessarily indicative to future results. There is a substantial risk of loss trading stocks and options with or without this or any other advertised product, service or system. Also, hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under-or-over compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity. simulated trading programs in general are also subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown.