The position is now up 1000%. I find myself unsure what to do at this point. (Aside from taking some profit out) should I close out the position, and if so put the money into what?
Also, I find myself vexed with thoughts like “if only I had made this other trade, I could have made even more profits” or “if only I had put even more money into the bet …” How do professional or amatuer traders deal with this?
An update on this trade in case anyone is interested. The position is now up 1500%. I also have another position which is up 2300% (it’s a deeper out-of-the-money put, which I realized would be an even better idea after seeing a Facebook post by Danielle Fong). For proper calibration I should mention that a significant part of these returns is due to chance rather than skill:
VIX (a measure of stock market volatility priced into options) was unreasonably low when I bought the puts (apparently because traders got used to central banks rescuing the stock market on every downturn), meaning the put options were underpriced in part due to that, but I didn’t know this.
Russia decided not to cooperate with Saudi Arabia in lowering oil production, in order to hurt the US shale oil industry. This is not something I could have reasonably predicted.
I also didn’t predict that the CDC would bungle their testing kits, and the FDA would delay independent testing by others so much, thus making containment nearly impossible in the US.
Another reason for attributing part of the gains (from betting on the coronavirus market crash) to luck, from Rob Henderson’s newsletter which BTW I highly recommend:
The geneticist Razib Khan has said that the reason the U.S. took so long to respond to the virus is that Americans do not consider China to be a real place. For people in the U.S., “Wuhan is a different planet, mentally.” From my view, it didn’t seem “real” to Americans (or Brits) until Italy happened.
Not only have I lived in China, my father was born in Wuhan and I’ve visited there multiple times.
It feels like your background should be attributed differently than things like the Saudi-Russian spat, or the artificially deflated VIX. In Zvi’s terminology this is an Unknown Known; it isn’t as though you weren’t updating based on it. It was merely an unarticulated component of the prior.
Have you sold those put options by now? Looks like the Fed and Treasury 6 trillion stimulation package boosted the market a lot. I had similar put position which dropped significantly during the past 2 days of Market rally. Do you think it is still good to hold the put options?
I did sell some of the puts, but not enough of them and not near enough to the bottom to not leave regrets. I definitely underestimated how fast and strong the monetary and fiscal responses were, and paid too much attention to epidemiological discussions relative to developments on those policy fronts. (The general lesson here seems to be that governments can learn to react fast on something they have direct experience with, e.g., Asian countries with SARS, the US with the 2008 financial crisis.) I sold 1⁄3 of remaining puts this morning at a big loss (relative to paper profits at the market bottom) and am holding the rest since it seems like the market has priced in the policy response but is being too optimistic about the epidemiology. The main reason I sold this morning is that the Fed might just “print” as much money as needed to keep the market at its current level, no matter how bad the real economy gets.
One explanation is that the deeper out-of-the-money put (which remains out-of-the-money) benefits from both a fall in the underlying security and an increase in VIX. The shallower out-of-the-money put (which became in-the-money as a result of the market drop) benefits from the former, but not so much from the latter. Maybe another way to explain it is that the deeper out-of-the-money put was more mispriced to begin with.
Not 100% on this but I suspect the in the money puts start to be dominated by the inherent value so you have to pay for that in the money portion of the option price. The out of the money put is pure volatility.
Epistemic status: I am not a financial advisor. Please double-check anything I say before taking me seriously. But I do have a little experience trading options. I am also not telling you what to do, just suggesting some (heh) options to consider.
Your “system 1” does not know how to trade (unless you are very experienced, and maybe not even then). Traders who know what they are doing make contingency plans in advance to avoid dangerous irrational/emotional trading. They have a trading system with rules to get them in and out. Whatever you do, don’t decide it on a whim. But doing nothing is also a choice.
Options are derivatives, which makes their pricing more complex than the underlying stock. Options have intrinsic value, which is what they’re worth if exercised immediately, and the rest is extrinsic value, which is their perceived potential to have more intrinsic value before they expire. Options with no intrinsic value are called out of the money. Extrinsic value is affected by time remaining and the implied volatility (IV), or the market-estimated future variance of the underlying. When the market has a big selloff like this, IV increases, which inflates the extrinsic value of options. And indeed, IV is elevated well above normal now. High IV conditions like this do not tend to last long (perhaps a month). When IV reverts to the mean, the option’s extrinsic value will be deflated. You should not be trading options with no awareness of IV conditions.
If you are no longer confident in your forecast, it may be prudent to take some money off the table. You can sell your option at a profit and then put the money in a different position that you like better. Perhaps a different strike or expiration date, or something else entirely.
A “safe haven” investment is one that traders tend to buy when the stock market is falling. For example, TLT (a long-term treasury bond ETF), has shot up due to the current market crisis, but it is also a suitable investment vehicle in its own right, with buy-and-hold seeing positive returns in the long term, so it can hold value even after the market turns around. But being a bond fund with lower volatility, its returns are likewise lower.
On the other hand, if you are more confident in your forecast and want to double down, you could close one of your puts and use some of the profits from your put to buy two puts at a lower strike. (Maybe out of the money for their Gamma*). If your forecast is correct, and the market continues to fall rapidly, you’ll gain profit even faster, but if you’re wrong and the market turns around, they may expire worthless. Keep in mind that these puts are more expensive than normal due to high IV, even considering the current underlying price. If the market regains confidence, they’ll deflate in value, even before the market turns around. Options with less extrinsic value are less affected by IV. (IV sensitivity is known as Vega.)
If you have a margin account, you could take advantage of the high IV conditions by selling call spreads. You would sell the call with a Delta* of ~.3 and simultaneously buy another call one strike higher up to cap your losses if you’re wrong (this also reduces the margin required). This will be for a net credit. If the market continues to fall, you can let the whole spread expire worthless and keep the credit, or buy it back early for less than the credit (maybe for half) and then reposition. If you’re not terribly wrong and the market goes sideways or even slightly up, you can still buy these back for less than you paid for them due to deflating extrinsic as expiration nears and IV falls (due to market stabilization). If you are wrong and the spread goes under, your max loss is limited to your original margin (the difference between strikes, less the initial credit).
[*Delta is a measure of sensitivity to the price of the underlying. It’s also a rough estimate of the probability that the option will have any intrinsic value at expiration. Gamma is the rate of change of Delta. Together with Theta (time sensitivity) and Vega, these are known as The Greeks, and should be available from your broker along with the option quotes.]
Thanks, this is a really helpful intro to options. One thing you didn’t address which makes me hesitant to do any more options trading is the ask-bid spread, which can easily be 10% or more for some of the options I’m looking at. I don’t know how to tell when the ask-bid spread makes strategies such as “sell 1 put and buy 2 puts at lower strike” not worth doing (because potential profit is eaten up by transaction costs).
Also, picking the strike price and expiration date is also a mystery to me. I did it by intuition and it seems have worked out well enough, but was probably far from optimal.
They have a trading system with rules to get them in and out.
I don’t see how a trading system can incorporate new complex and often ambiguous evidence in real time. I definitely take your point about emotional trading being dangerous though.
Maybe out of the money for their Gamma
What does this mean?
Is there a book you can recommend for a more complete education about options? Maybe I can quickly flip through it to help me figure out what to do.
the ask-bid spread, which can easily be 10% or more
Options are much less liquid than the underlying, since the market is divided among so many strikes and dates. If the spread is less than 10% of the ask price, that’s actually considered pretty good for an option. You can also look at open interest (the number of open contracts) and volume (the number traded today) for each contract to help judge liquidity (this information should also be available from the broker.) Typically strike prices closer to the underlying price are more liquid. Also, the monthly (third-Friday) contracts tend to be more liquid than the Weeklys. (Weeklys weren’t available before, so monthly contracts are something of a Schelling point. They also open sooner.)
Do not trade options with market orders. Use limit orders and make an offer at about the midpoint between bid and ask. The market maker will usually need some time to get around to your order. You’ll usually get a fill within 15 minutes. If not, you may have to adjust your price a little before someone is willing to take the other side of the deal. A little patience can save a lot of money.
I don’t know how to tell when the ask-bid spread makes strategies such as “sell 1 put and buy 2 puts at lower strike” not worth doing (because potential profit is eaten up by transaction costs).
I meant close one of the profitable puts you already own, and then use the money to buy two more. (Incidentally, the spread you are describing is called a backspread, which is also worth considering when you expect a big move, as the short option can offset some of the problematic Greeks of the long ones.) Maybe you can vary the ratios. It depends on what’s available. I don’t know how many puts you have, but how aggressive you should be depends on your forecast, account size, and risk tolerance.
I don’t know your transaction costs either, but commissions have gotten pretty reasonable these days. This can vary widely among brokers. TD Ameritrade, for example, charges only $0.65 per contract and lets you close contracts under $0.05 for free. Tastyworks charges $1.00 per contract, but always lets you close for free. They also cap their commissions at $10 per leg (which can add up if you trade at high enough volume). Firstrade charges $0. That is not a typo. (There are still some regulatory fees that add up to less that a cent.) If your commissions are much higher than these, maybe you need a new broker.
I don’t see how a trading system can incorporate new complex and often ambiguous evidence in real time. I definitely take your point about emotional trading being dangerous though.
Systematic trading is not the same thing as algorithmic trading. They’re related, but algorithmic trading is taken to the extreme where a computer can do all the work. Normal systematic trading can have a human element, and you can provide the “forecast” component (instead of technical signals or something), and the rules tell you what to do based on your current forecast.
You need to have an exit already planned when you get in. Not just how to deal with a win, but also how to handle a loss, or you may be tempted to take profits too early, or be in denial and ride a loss too far. The adage is “cut your losses short and let your profits run”. Emotional trading tends to do the opposite and lose money. (BTW, the rule is the opposite for short option spreads.)
Carver’s Systematic Trading is a good introduction to the concept. This one I have read.
Gamma is the rate of change of Delta. It’s how curved your P&L graph is. Gamma opposes Theta. If you want more Deltas (like owning shares) and you expect a big move, Gammas are a way to get them cheaply, because they turn in to Deltas. (Of course, Deltas are negative for long puts.)
Is there a book you can recommend for a more complete education about options? Maybe I can quickly flip through it to help me figure out what to do.
Options are complex, but maybe not that complex. Option pricing models do use differential equations, but everybody uses computers for that. Trading options is not beyond the reach on anyone who passed a calculus class, but I’m still not sure if you can pick it up that quickly.
I did not learn all of this from a textbook. I know there are books that cover this. Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives is the introductory textbook I hear recommended, but I have not read it myself (you might want to skip the futures chapters.) There may be shorter introductions. I think Tastyworks was supposed to have a good intro somewhere.
Also, picking the strike price and expiration date is also a mystery to me.
Use the Greeks! Watch them and adjust them to your needs. They trade off against each other, but a spread can have the sum or difference of them. Keep in mind that extrinsic value is perceived potential and the Greeks make a lot more sense. The strikes nearest the underlying price have the most extrinsic and liquidity. Those deeper in the money have more Delta. Each Delta is like owning a share (puts have negative Deltas). Those further out of the money have more Gamma for the price. These relationships are nonlinear, because the underlying price variance is assumed to have a normal distribution (which is close enough to true most of the time).
Theta is not constant. It gets stronger the closer you get to expiration. Think about future variance as a bell curve spreading out from the current price like <. There’s much less time to vary left near the tip of the curve. For this reason, when holding a long option position, you probably want 60-90 days so you’re not exposed to too much Theta. But that also means more Vega, due to the higher extrinsic value.
On one hand, people in the mainstream still seem too optimistic to me. Like, apparently,
Cases of the new coronavirus disease are rising quickly outside China, and the odds of the outbreak turning into a pandemic have now doubled — from 20% to 40%, according to a report from Moody’s Analytics.
This seems super optimistic to me. I don’t see why people are still forecasting majority probability that it will be contained. On the other hand, I’ve been convinced to be more optimistic than the 15-20% prediction of disaster I had the other day.
I did a more detailed dive into the evidence for a case fatality rate in the 2-3% range and I know think that it’s very likely lower. Still, at 0.5% − 1% it would be much more severe than an average flu season and the market might take it seriously simply due to the shock factor. There is also the potential for an effective anti-viral being developed by the end of the year, which makes me a bit more hopeful.
I am not well calibrated about whether the ~12% market drop is appropriate given the evidence above.
I find myself unsure what to do at this point. (Aside from taking some profit out) should I close out the position, and if so put the money into what?
I bought some $APT (US-based mask manufacturer) in mid-January.
Sold off most of it this week as it 8x’d. I put most of the earnings into other coronavirus-relevant names: $AIM, $INO, $COCP, $MRNA, $TRIB. Also considering $GILD but haven’t bought any yet ($MRNA and $GILD aren’t really corona pure-plays because they’re large-ish biotech companies with multiple product lines).
I’ll revisit these allocations when the market opens on Monday. I don’t have a good sense of how smart this is… there’s a lot of hype in this sector and I haven’t carefully diligenced any of these picks, they’re just names that seem to be doing something real and haven’t had a crazy run-up yet.
I also pulled back a lot of my portfolio into cash.
The position is now up 1000%. I find myself unsure what to do at this point. (Aside from taking some profit out) should I close out the position, and if so put the money into what?
Also, I find myself vexed with thoughts like “if only I had made this other trade, I could have made even more profits” or “if only I had put even more money into the bet …” How do professional or amatuer traders deal with this?
An update on this trade in case anyone is interested. The position is now up 1500%. I also have another position which is up 2300% (it’s a deeper out-of-the-money put, which I realized would be an even better idea after seeing a Facebook post by Danielle Fong). For proper calibration I should mention that a significant part of these returns is due to chance rather than skill:
VIX (a measure of stock market volatility priced into options) was unreasonably low when I bought the puts (apparently because traders got used to central banks rescuing the stock market on every downturn), meaning the put options were underpriced in part due to that, but I didn’t know this.
Russia decided not to cooperate with Saudi Arabia in lowering oil production, in order to hurt the US shale oil industry. This is not something I could have reasonably predicted.
I also didn’t predict that the CDC would bungle their testing kits, and the FDA would delay independent testing by others so much, thus making containment nearly impossible in the US.
Another reason for attributing part of the gains (from betting on the coronavirus market crash) to luck, from Rob Henderson’s newsletter which BTW I highly recommend:
Not only have I lived in China, my father was born in Wuhan and I’ve visited there multiple times.
It feels like your background should be attributed differently than things like the Saudi-Russian spat, or the artificially deflated VIX. In Zvi’s terminology this is an Unknown Known; it isn’t as though you weren’t updating based on it. It was merely an unarticulated component of the prior.
After today’s crash, what are you at now?
Up 2600% and 5200%. ETA: Now back down to 2300% and 4200%.
Have you sold those put options by now? Looks like the Fed and Treasury 6 trillion stimulation package boosted the market a lot. I had similar put position which dropped significantly during the past 2 days of Market rally. Do you think it is still good to hold the put options?
I did sell some of the puts, but not enough of them and not near enough to the bottom to not leave regrets. I definitely underestimated how fast and strong the monetary and fiscal responses were, and paid too much attention to epidemiological discussions relative to developments on those policy fronts. (The general lesson here seems to be that governments can learn to react fast on something they have direct experience with, e.g., Asian countries with SARS, the US with the 2008 financial crisis.) I sold 1⁄3 of remaining puts this morning at a big loss (relative to paper profits at the market bottom) and am holding the rest since it seems like the market has priced in the policy response but is being too optimistic about the epidemiology. The main reason I sold this morning is that the Fed might just “print” as much money as needed to keep the market at its current level, no matter how bad the real economy gets.
Why are deeper out-of-the-money puts better here? Have been scratching my head at this one for a while, but haven’t been able to figure it out.
One explanation is that the deeper out-of-the-money put (which remains out-of-the-money) benefits from both a fall in the underlying security and an increase in VIX. The shallower out-of-the-money put (which became in-the-money as a result of the market drop) benefits from the former, but not so much from the latter. Maybe another way to explain it is that the deeper out-of-the-money put was more mispriced to begin with.
For a given dollar notiional investment, you are buying more vega with deeper OTM puts (or just more contracts).
Basically the same as why getting things correct on 10 20-to-1 bets pays more than getting a 1-to-1 (even odds) bet.
Not 100% on this but I suspect the in the money puts start to be dominated by the inherent value so you have to pay for that in the money portion of the option price. The out of the money put is pure volatility.
Epistemic status: I am not a financial advisor. Please double-check anything I say before taking me seriously. But I do have a little experience trading options. I am also not telling you what to do, just suggesting some (heh) options to consider.
Your “system 1” does not know how to trade (unless you are very experienced, and maybe not even then). Traders who know what they are doing make contingency plans in advance to avoid dangerous irrational/emotional trading. They have a trading system with rules to get them in and out. Whatever you do, don’t decide it on a whim. But doing nothing is also a choice.
Options are derivatives, which makes their pricing more complex than the underlying stock. Options have intrinsic value, which is what they’re worth if exercised immediately, and the rest is extrinsic value, which is their perceived potential to have more intrinsic value before they expire. Options with no intrinsic value are called out of the money. Extrinsic value is affected by time remaining and the implied volatility (IV), or the market-estimated future variance of the underlying. When the market has a big selloff like this, IV increases, which inflates the extrinsic value of options. And indeed, IV is elevated well above normal now. High IV conditions like this do not tend to last long (perhaps a month). When IV reverts to the mean, the option’s extrinsic value will be deflated. You should not be trading options with no awareness of IV conditions.
If you are no longer confident in your forecast, it may be prudent to take some money off the table. You can sell your option at a profit and then put the money in a different position that you like better. Perhaps a different strike or expiration date, or something else entirely.
A “safe haven” investment is one that traders tend to buy when the stock market is falling. For example, TLT (a long-term treasury bond ETF), has shot up due to the current market crisis, but it is also a suitable investment vehicle in its own right, with buy-and-hold seeing positive returns in the long term, so it can hold value even after the market turns around. But being a bond fund with lower volatility, its returns are likewise lower.
On the other hand, if you are more confident in your forecast and want to double down, you could close one of your puts and use some of the profits from your put to buy two puts at a lower strike. (Maybe out of the money for their Gamma*). If your forecast is correct, and the market continues to fall rapidly, you’ll gain profit even faster, but if you’re wrong and the market turns around, they may expire worthless. Keep in mind that these puts are more expensive than normal due to high IV, even considering the current underlying price. If the market regains confidence, they’ll deflate in value, even before the market turns around. Options with less extrinsic value are less affected by IV. (IV sensitivity is known as Vega.)
If you have a margin account, you could take advantage of the high IV conditions by selling call spreads. You would sell the call with a Delta* of ~.3 and simultaneously buy another call one strike higher up to cap your losses if you’re wrong (this also reduces the margin required). This will be for a net credit. If the market continues to fall, you can let the whole spread expire worthless and keep the credit, or buy it back early for less than the credit (maybe for half) and then reposition. If you’re not terribly wrong and the market goes sideways or even slightly up, you can still buy these back for less than you paid for them due to deflating extrinsic as expiration nears and IV falls (due to market stabilization). If you are wrong and the spread goes under, your max loss is limited to your original margin (the difference between strikes, less the initial credit).
[*Delta is a measure of sensitivity to the price of the underlying. It’s also a rough estimate of the probability that the option will have any intrinsic value at expiration. Gamma is the rate of change of Delta. Together with Theta (time sensitivity) and Vega, these are known as The Greeks, and should be available from your broker along with the option quotes.]
Thanks, this is a really helpful intro to options. One thing you didn’t address which makes me hesitant to do any more options trading is the ask-bid spread, which can easily be 10% or more for some of the options I’m looking at. I don’t know how to tell when the ask-bid spread makes strategies such as “sell 1 put and buy 2 puts at lower strike” not worth doing (because potential profit is eaten up by transaction costs).
Also, picking the strike price and expiration date is also a mystery to me. I did it by intuition and it seems have worked out well enough, but was probably far from optimal.
I don’t see how a trading system can incorporate new complex and often ambiguous evidence in real time. I definitely take your point about emotional trading being dangerous though.
What does this mean?
Is there a book you can recommend for a more complete education about options? Maybe I can quickly flip through it to help me figure out what to do.
Options are much less liquid than the underlying, since the market is divided among so many strikes and dates. If the spread is less than 10% of the ask price, that’s actually considered pretty good for an option. You can also look at open interest (the number of open contracts) and volume (the number traded today) for each contract to help judge liquidity (this information should also be available from the broker.) Typically strike prices closer to the underlying price are more liquid. Also, the monthly (third-Friday) contracts tend to be more liquid than the Weeklys. (Weeklys weren’t available before, so monthly contracts are something of a Schelling point. They also open sooner.)
Do not trade options with market orders. Use limit orders and make an offer at about the midpoint between bid and ask. The market maker will usually need some time to get around to your order. You’ll usually get a fill within 15 minutes. If not, you may have to adjust your price a little before someone is willing to take the other side of the deal. A little patience can save a lot of money.
I meant close one of the profitable puts you already own, and then use the money to buy two more. (Incidentally, the spread you are describing is called a backspread, which is also worth considering when you expect a big move, as the short option can offset some of the problematic Greeks of the long ones.) Maybe you can vary the ratios. It depends on what’s available. I don’t know how many puts you have, but how aggressive you should be depends on your forecast, account size, and risk tolerance.
I don’t know your transaction costs either, but commissions have gotten pretty reasonable these days. This can vary widely among brokers. TD Ameritrade, for example, charges only $0.65 per contract and lets you close contracts under $0.05 for free. Tastyworks charges $1.00 per contract, but always lets you close for free. They also cap their commissions at $10 per leg (which can add up if you trade at high enough volume). Firstrade charges $0. That is not a typo. (There are still some regulatory fees that add up to less that a cent.) If your commissions are much higher than these, maybe you need a new broker.
Systematic trading is not the same thing as algorithmic trading. They’re related, but algorithmic trading is taken to the extreme where a computer can do all the work. Normal systematic trading can have a human element, and you can provide the “forecast” component (instead of technical signals or something), and the rules tell you what to do based on your current forecast.
You need to have an exit already planned when you get in. Not just how to deal with a win, but also how to handle a loss, or you may be tempted to take profits too early, or be in denial and ride a loss too far. The adage is “cut your losses short and let your profits run”. Emotional trading tends to do the opposite and lose money. (BTW, the rule is the opposite for short option spreads.)
Carver’s Systematic Trading is a good introduction to the concept. This one I have read.
Gamma is the rate of change of Delta. It’s how curved your P&L graph is. Gamma opposes Theta. If you want more Deltas (like owning shares) and you expect a big move, Gammas are a way to get them cheaply, because they turn in to Deltas. (Of course, Deltas are negative for long puts.)
Options are complex, but maybe not that complex. Option pricing models do use differential equations, but everybody uses computers for that. Trading options is not beyond the reach on anyone who passed a calculus class, but I’m still not sure if you can pick it up that quickly.
I did not learn all of this from a textbook. I know there are books that cover this. Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives is the introductory textbook I hear recommended, but I have not read it myself (you might want to skip the futures chapters.) There may be shorter introductions. I think Tastyworks was supposed to have a good intro somewhere.
Use the Greeks! Watch them and adjust them to your needs. They trade off against each other, but a spread can have the sum or difference of them. Keep in mind that extrinsic value is perceived potential and the Greeks make a lot more sense. The strikes nearest the underlying price have the most extrinsic and liquidity. Those deeper in the money have more Delta. Each Delta is like owning a share (puts have negative Deltas). Those further out of the money have more Gamma for the price. These relationships are nonlinear, because the underlying price variance is assumed to have a normal distribution (which is close enough to true most of the time).
Theta is not constant. It gets stronger the closer you get to expiration. Think about future variance as a bell curve spreading out from the current price like <. There’s much less time to vary left near the tip of the curve. For this reason, when holding a long option position, you probably want 60-90 days so you’re not exposed to too much Theta. But that also means more Vega, due to the higher extrinsic value.
On one hand, people in the mainstream still seem too optimistic to me. Like, apparently,
This seems super optimistic to me. I don’t see why people are still forecasting majority probability that it will be contained. On the other hand, I’ve been convinced to be more optimistic than the 15-20% prediction of disaster I had the other day.
I did a more detailed dive into the evidence for a case fatality rate in the 2-3% range and I know think that it’s very likely lower. Still, at 0.5% − 1% it would be much more severe than an average flu season and the market might take it seriously simply due to the shock factor. There is also the potential for an effective anti-viral being developed by the end of the year, which makes me a bit more hopeful.
I am not well calibrated about whether the ~12% market drop is appropriate given the evidence above.
I bought some $APT (US-based mask manufacturer) in mid-January.
Sold off most of it this week as it 8x’d. I put most of the earnings into other coronavirus-relevant names: $AIM, $INO, $COCP, $MRNA, $TRIB. Also considering $GILD but haven’t bought any yet ($MRNA and $GILD aren’t really corona pure-plays because they’re large-ish biotech companies with multiple product lines).
I’ll revisit these allocations when the market opens on Monday. I don’t have a good sense of how smart this is… there’s a lot of hype in this sector and I haven’t carefully diligenced any of these picks, they’re just names that seem to be doing something real and haven’t had a crazy run-up yet.
I also pulled back a lot of my portfolio into cash.
Habituation, meditation, and/or alcohol.