Monday, March 13, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

We usually start our comments about how our fearless, intrepid investor manages her options activity. She usually writes (sells) covered calls on SPY on Mondays, expiry date on the Fridays of the same week at a strike price sufficiently out-of-the-money to give her a 1% per month premium income. That will significantly reduce the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

We have previously stated  that the most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She bought Novavax (NVAX) to write covered calls on and as the stock declined, she lost much more than she received in premium income.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Monday, March 6, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

Our fearless, intrepid investor usually writes (sells) covered calls on SPY on Mondays, expiry date on the Fridays of the same week at a strike price sufficiently out-of-the-money to give her a 1% per month premium income. That will significantly reduce the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

We have previously stated  that the most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She bought Novavax (NVAX) to write covered calls on and as the stock declined, she lost much more than she received in premium income.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Monday, February 27, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

Our fearless, intrepid investor usually writes (sells) covered calls on SPY on Mondays, expiry date on the Fridays of the same week at a strike price sufficiently out-of-the-money to give her a 1% per month premium income. That will significantly reduce the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

We have previously stated  that the most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She bought Novavax (NVAX) to write covered calls on and as the stock declined, she lost much more than she received in premium income.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Tuesday, February 14, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

Our fearless, intrepid investor usually writes (sells) covered calls on SPY on Mondays, expiry date on the Fridays of the same week. She was busy with personal issues yesterday, Monday, February 13, so she did not get around to doing that and will do so today.

Two questions.

First, is there a big difference between writing covered calls on a Tuesday instead of a Monday, expiry date Friday of the same week?

Well, the closer we get to the expiry date, the smaller the premium income available. But the inevitable market fluctuations often offset that difference, therefore, it is not a major concern.

The second question is why does she choose SPY instead another of the thousands of securities on which investors can write covered calls?

SPY is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the S&P 500, which itself is a good representation of the American economy as a whole, the world’s strongest economy in the last 200 years. SPY is the best choice among the few ETFs tracking the S&P 500. It is the largest, meaning that orders are filled reliably and instantly. Further, it has the smallest bid/ask spread, which is an expense to investors, an expense they frequently ignore.

Individual stocks carry a great deal more risk than the American economy as a whole does. That is why we recommend against investing in individual stocks. We have previously stated  that the most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She bought Novavax (NVAX) to write covered calls on and as the stock declined, she lost much more than she received in premium income.

She also decided to write (sell) covered calls sufficiently out-of-the-money to earn about 1% per month or slightly more. That will significantly reduce the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Question and answer about where the economy is heading and what to do about it

On February 4, 2023, from Ray Bursey, Newfoundland, Canada,

Questions:

I have just seen this and wondered if you agree and what you see or feel the economy may be heading for.

https://youtu.be/rQWmrVk-gpo

 

Monday Morning Millionaire Program Answer:

Thank you for your question, Ray.

Over the last several decades, house prices have risen at about half the rate of the rise in the S&P 500.

Follow the Case Shiller index for details. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case%E2%80%93Shiller_index)

For quantitative tightening, follow https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?search=quantitative+tightening&title=Special:Search&profile=advanced&fulltext=1&ns0=1

So where is the economy heading and what can we do about it?

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Monday, February 6, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

 

The most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She sold just out-of-the-money covered calls on Novavax (NVAX) on Mondays, expiry dates on Fridays of the same week. NVAX declined to a far greater extent than the premium income she received for that transaction.

It is far better to sell covered calls on the American market as a whole by using an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the S&P 500. SPY is the best. It is the largest, oldest, and most heavily traded US ETF. It has the narrowest bid/ask spread, one of investors’ expenses that most tend to ignore.

Also, writing (selling) covered calls sufficiently out-of-the-money to earn about 1% per month or slightly more, significantly reduces the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Monday, January 30, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

The most important thing to learn from our fearless, intrepid investor’s loss of $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over a year is not to write covered calls on individual securities. She sold just out-of-the-money covered calls on Novavax (NVAX) on Mondays, expiry dates on Fridays of the same week. NVAX declined to a far greater extent than the premium income she received for that transaction.

It is far better to sell covered calls on the American market as a whole by using an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the S&P 500. SPY is the best. It is the largest, oldest, and most heavily traded US ETF. It has the narrowest bid/ask spread, one of investors’ expenses that most tend to ignore.

Also, writing (selling) covered calls sufficiently out-of-the-money to earn about 1% per month or slightly more, significantly reduces the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return.

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Monday, January 23, 2023. How our fearless, intrepid investor made out last week and her plans for today

In previous posts, we mentioned that our fearless, intrepid investor lost $US10,990.00 in her “fun” portfolio over one year by writing (selling) just out-of-the-money covered calls on Novavax (NVAX) on Mondays, expiry dates on Fridays of the same week. How much fun is that?

She ignored habit number three, which recommends that investors buy the American market and not pick individual stocks. Investors can buy the American market by acquiring an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the S&P 500.

SPY is the best. It is the largest, oldest, and most heavily traded US ETF. It has the narrowest bid/ask spread, one of investors’ expenses that most tend to ignore.

All risk in selling covered calls comes from the market movement of the underlying security. When she owned NVAX, it dropped significantly more than the premium income she received. So, no more writing covered calls on individual securities for her.

Further,  she decided to write (sell) covered calls sufficiently out-of-the-money to earn about 1% per month or slightly more. That would significantly reduce the possibility of being assigned while yielding a decent return!

What did she do last Tuesday, January 17, 2023? (Monday, January 16, NYSE was closed for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.)

She sold covered calls on SPY at a strike price of $US5.00 out-of-the-money, that is, $US404.00, expiry date Friday, January 20 (SPY C 20JAN23 404.00 US). She earned $US0.83 per share – much less than the previous week’s premium income which was $US1.22 per share. Nevertheless, it still is guaranteed,  immediate and decent. 

What will she do today when the NYSE opens at 9:30 AM?

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Freedom from Ownership

Greetings everyone,

The post below, which Timothy Brown wrote, is intended for dentists but it would apply to most business people. It will make you think. Enjoy.

Milan

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Freedom from Ownership – how one dentist sold everything to see the world!

As the hull crashed down for the third time, we realized that this was not going to be an ordinary boat trip. Heavy gales across Tasmania the day before had resulted in 4 meter swells and we were headed straight into them. Ginger tablets had been handed out in anticipation of the rough seas, but the very experienced captain reassured everyone that ‘this was nothing’. We forged onwards in our floor length waterproof coats towards the beginning of the Southern Ocean (with nothing but open water until Antarctica), and I was struck at how life often leads us down paths that we never could have imagined. While the other two tour boats had turned around for calmer waters, we continued (uncomfortably) into what felt like the full magnificent force of Mother Nature.

From this excursion at the ‘bottom of the world’, to living overseas, to being the only two people spending an afternoon with elephants at a sanctuary in Thailand, to celebrating my 50th birthday walking the West Highland way in Scotland, the past two and a half years have been filled with life changing experiences and……

Freedom.

Don’t get me wrong – I loved being a dentist, but when I received an eye-opening (yet very treatable) diagnosis five years ago, it was thrust upon me to make decisions for the benefit of my long-term health and the well-being of my family. Proper planning gave me the option to continue practicing as I was, modify my professional and personal lifestyle, or look very carefully at my bigger picture and realize that the pressure of even pre-pandemic dentistry was not agreeing with me.

I did receive a very useful critical illness insurance payout, but that did not impact the final decision. What made the biggest difference was a full understanding of what my biggest asset was worth. Shortly after paying off the practice (which was a magical day!), and at the behest of my accountant, I engaged ROI Corp. to perform an appraisal as a means of long-term financial planning. Tim Brown even stopped at the practice on his way north and gave his initial assessment. In my mind, I had a rough idea of the practice value based on the purchase price ten years earlier, consistent growth, and some rough guidelines for practices a couple of hours outside of the GTA. I couldn’t have been more wrong. The practice was appraised at double my high-end estimate, and the information provided tremendous insight into the operating efficiency (or lack thereof). Even better, a few simple changes added more than six figures to the total.

I also considered that the practice itself was a large source of capital, but not easily accessible. For years, my accountant had sung the praises of other clients who were funding private mortgages and enjoying a consistent return (in the form of monthly passive income) of 7-10%. The details of that can be saved for another article, but ultimately after plenty of thought, my wife and I chose to liquidate our assets, greatly simplify our lives, and move overseas to see the world. With greatly reduced expenses, almost all of our income was disposable which allowed for frequent travel at a variety of ‘star’ levels. Having recently returned to Canada for some new challenges, we are still enjoying a lifetime of memories (many photographs to organize) and a wealth of world experience garnered from stepping out of our collective comfort zone. Now getting back to the concept of freedom – this can mean a lot of different things. I don’t begin to suggest that world travel is the only form of freedom a dentist might seek – it could be continuing to practice without the pressure of managing the office, or it could be picking up a new hobby, or diving into an existing one. Whatever the dream might be, it is probably more attainable than you realize.  Relying only on the passive income to fund our new lifestyle, two plus years overseas visiting more than 30 countries and a 9-week trip around the world, had a negligible impact on our net worth (down no more than 3%). Information is power!

In Closing, Timothy A. Brown, CEO of ROI Corporation adds this:

I have met and spoken with many dentists who, after selling, had this to say: “I wish I had done it sooner.”

 

A common thread is that they held on too long. Why?

  1. Their Ego told them to be a responsible owner and to be a success.
  2. Their advisory circle told them to ride out the lows and to be a winner!
  3. Their finances held many to the daily grind.
  4. They could not face the loss of control over their income.

 

This list goes on… Just ask Drew Markham. He sold young, travelled and his story should reach you if you feel any stress or anxiety from ownership.

 

Freedom comes at a price – but Freedom need not be expensive!