I admit that I did a massive eye-roll when I first saw the title "Get Rich With Options - Four Winning Strategies Straight From The Exchange Floor". I also admit that I found the book to be engaging and useful, with much practical advice and examples on how to implement the 4 strategies mentioned in the title. The strategies, which I summarize below, are not the kind of "get-rich-overnight", "passive income" "systems" touted elsewhere, but very down-to-earth, one might even say hum-drum, methods to give you a shot at having the coin land on your side just a bit more often than not.
There are other books providing much more detail on option pricing, the role of volatility, plus more option investment strategies than you can shake a stick at, but these, by-and-large, miss the immediacy of the lessons offered here.
In the author's words: "If there’s one thing that I want you to come away with after reading this book, it is the fact that you must be open to the idea of being an option seller as much as you would be an option buyer. [...] Don’t be under the impression that picking a market direction and being right on it is the only way to profit. Far from it. If you concentrate on selling out-of-the-money options, you will gain a much higher probability of profit from your trades. The reason for this is because even if the market moves against your initial directional call, the out-of-the-money options can still expire worthless, leaving you with a winner."
The four strategies are:
1. The **Deep-In-The-Money (DITM) call strategy** is the a way a stock but with a fraction of the money at risk. If you believe a stock is going to go up (eventually), instead of buying the stock outright, buy a DITM Call option with a long duration left to expiry and a Delta of 0.9 or higher (meaning that the value of the option moves at least $0.90 for every $1.00 move of the underlying stock). You will find these where the strike price is about half the stock price, which means that you just have to invest half the money to capture at least 90% of the growth.
2. If you want to buy a stock at a lower level than it is trading today, consider using the **Put-Sell strategy**: sell Puts on the option at the Strike price you are willing to pay for it and get paid for waiting for the stock to drop, instead of just waiting.
3. If you have an idea of there the stock won't go (above or below a certain price in a certain time), you can make directional bets with **Option Credit Spread**. Even though the market might move against you, the probabilities will be on your side because the option strikes are out-of-the-money. The bull/bear credit spread involves selling an OTM put/call at the floor/ceiling and buy an even further OTM put/call f0r protection. Since the further OTM you go, the lower the option prices, this spread should net you some points. You can enhance this strategy by focusing on stock with a temporarily high Implied Volatility (which means its options are temporarily more expensive).
4. Selling stock you own at the price you want by selling **Covered Calls** at the desired level. Again you are getting paid while waiting on the stock to reach the level you are looking for.
For me, the discussion of the 1st and 3rd strategy were useful, as well as the author's take on the role and sources of Implied Volatility. I might recommend this book to a fellow options trader, and I will probably re-read some parts of it at some point. Four stars.