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Nov 17, 2025 • 18min

Market Measures - November 17, 2025 - Price Is Noise, IV Is Signal

A comprehensive study comparing IWM and SPY revealed that when normalized for IV-adjusted notional value (with SPY's value approximately double IWM's), both ETFs show remarkably similar win rates (71-72%). Despite IWM offering higher premiums with greater volatility than SPY, their risk-reward ratios become nearly identical when properly adjusted.
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Nov 17, 2025 • 19min

Market Measures - November 17, 2025 - Price Is Noise, IV Is Signal

A comprehensive study comparing IWM and SPY revealed that when normalized for IV-adjusted notional value (with SPY's value approximately double IWM's), both ETFs show remarkably similar win rates (71-72%). Despite IWM offering higher premiums with greater volatility than SPY, their risk-reward ratios become nearly identical when properly adjusted.
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Nov 17, 2025 • 30min

The Skinny on Options: Abstract Applications - November 17, 2025 - Convexity in a 0 DTE World

Today's Skinny on Options: Abstract Applications focuses on convexity in a zero-DTE options world, noting that most market volume now comes from zero-day options. Dr. Jim discusses how these instruments represent the maximum point of convexity risk, with gamma reaching its peak at expiration. The trio explore risk management strategies, including position sizing, using defined-risk trades, and preferring SPX over SPY due to cash settlement eliminating overnight exposure. They highlight how gamma exposure differs for long options (positive gamma with limited risk) versus short options (negative gamma with unlimited risk). Lastly, the guys concludes that zero-DTE strategies work best as complements to traditional premium selling approaches rather than foundational trading strategies, with proper awareness of their inherent convexity risks.
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Nov 17, 2025 • 29min

The Skinny on Options: Abstract Applications - November 17, 2025 - Convexity in a 0 DTE World

Today's Skinny on Options: Abstract Applications focuses on convexity in a zero-DTE options world, noting that most market volume now comes from zero-day options. Dr. Jim discusses how these instruments represent the maximum point of convexity risk, with gamma reaching its peak at expiration. The trio explore risk management strategies, including position sizing, using defined-risk trades, and preferring SPX over SPY due to cash settlement eliminating overnight exposure. They highlight how gamma exposure differs for long options (positive gamma with limited risk) versus short options (negative gamma with unlimited risk). Lastly, the guys concludes that zero-DTE strategies work best as complements to traditional premium selling approaches rather than foundational trading strategies, with proper awareness of their inherent convexity risks.
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Nov 17, 2025 • 12min

Opening Bell - November 17, 2025

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Nov 17, 2025 • 11min

Opening Bell - November 17, 2025

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Nov 17, 2025 • 15min

Options Jive - November 17, 2025 - Research Corner: Tech Sector Leads Sell-Off After Longest Shutdown in History

Hosts Nick and Tony welcomed researcher Kai to discuss an ironic week where the historic 43-day government shutdown ended but markets immediately sold off 2% rather than rallying on the "positive news." Bitcoin's plunge below $100K created widespread pain visible on social media, with Kai questioning why traders use 25-50x leverage "trying to be rich in one hour" before the inevitable wipeout. The tech-led sell-off centered on AI investment sustainability concerns that have been building for months, with high-flyers like APP down 14%, STX, Coinbase, Palantir, and Hood all down 10-12% for the week. Earnings season statistics remained remarkably consistent with over 3,000 companies now reported showing 51% losers, 49% winners, and -0.2% average returns - reinforcing the 50-50 nature of earnings trades. The upcoming week features major retail earnings (Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, Target) and NVIDIA as the main event Wednesday, with FOMC minutes also Wednesday providing December rate cut clarity (currently 50-60% probability).
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Nov 17, 2025 • 16min

Options Jive - November 17, 2025 - Research Corner: Tech Sector Leads Sell-Off After Longest Shutdown in History

Hosts Nick and Tony welcomed researcher Kai to discuss an ironic week where the historic 43-day government shutdown ended but markets immediately sold off 2% rather than rallying on the "positive news." Bitcoin's plunge below $100K created widespread pain visible on social media, with Kai questioning why traders use 25-50x leverage "trying to be rich in one hour" before the inevitable wipeout. The tech-led sell-off centered on AI investment sustainability concerns that have been building for months, with high-flyers like APP down 14%, STX, Coinbase, Palantir, and Hood all down 10-12% for the week. Earnings season statistics remained remarkably consistent with over 3,000 companies now reported showing 51% losers, 49% winners, and -0.2% average returns - reinforcing the 50-50 nature of earnings trades. The upcoming week features major retail earnings (Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, Target) and NVIDIA as the main event Wednesday, with FOMC minutes also Wednesday providing December rate cut clarity (currently 50-60% probability).
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Nov 17, 2025 • 12min

Confirm and Send - November 17, 2025

The E-mini S&P declined 13 points to 6741 after reaching 6801 earlier. All four major indices opened green but turned negative, with NASDAQ down 46, Russell down 7, and Dow down 103. Volatility ticked up 22 cents, showing some expansion after remaining red overnight despite minor S&P dips. Bitcoin fell $400 to below $9300, appearing weaker than Ethereum. Oil traded up slightly while gold dropped $26. Natural gas declined nearly 3%, making it the day's biggest percentage loser. Nick and Tony suggest watching for potential buying opportunities if indexes open lower and volatility turns red, with particular interest in NASDAQ and S&P trades rather than Russell.
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Nov 17, 2025 • 13min

Confirm and Send - November 17, 2025

The E-mini S&P declined 13 points to 6741 after reaching 6801 earlier. All four major indices opened green but turned negative, with NASDAQ down 46, Russell down 7, and Dow down 103. Volatility ticked up 22 cents, showing some expansion after remaining red overnight despite minor S&P dips. Bitcoin fell $400 to below $9300, appearing weaker than Ethereum. Oil traded up slightly while gold dropped $26. Natural gas declined nearly 3%, making it the day's biggest percentage loser. Nick and Tony suggest watching for potential buying opportunities if indexes open lower and volatility turns red, with particular interest in NASDAQ and S&P trades rather than Russell.

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