Hi, I'm new to the market (just started doing this this summer) and after hearing a professional investor say he uses Think or Swim I figured it must be reputable enough so I started an account. I started looking around with the paper money (thank goodness) and the place looked like a bloomin' labyrinth! I appreiate that there are videos that will illustrate how to do these things I'm trying to figure out. I'm saving this to my Understanding Options playlist so I can find your channel again.
Bill, great job on your podcasts, You have a great way to explain complex concepts to ordinary people and support them by out of life examples. Didn't know about your youtube videos until you recently mentioned it. This one's helped me a lot. Great job. Thank you, and keep it up.
Hi, I've been a long term Scott Trade Customer. There is really one trade that I would like to see ST offer and its a naked Put. I trade INTC quite a bit and would very much like to Sell puts each and every month. However the site tells me this is not allowed. Can you help?
Many brokers do not allow naked put selling but you may wish to check. It may be an approval process you must go through. If they do not allow it, you could use covered calls since they are synthetically identical to selling puts. Although not as efficient, they have an identical payoff structure. That's because buying stock today with the obligation to sell (covered call) is the same as accepting an obligation today to buy shares in the future (naked put).
Type your stock ticker symbol into the quote box on the Trade Tab. Next, click the "bid" price, which generates a sell order template (which will be highligted in red at bottom of your screen.) On that red line, you'll see a column marked "order." Click on the drop-down menu and select LIMIT. Next, type your limit price of $1.89 in the "price" field. Select GTC from TIF menu (time in force) if you want the oder to be good-til-canceled.
I think I did this a while back but when I placed the order, my shares were sold right away even do the price was not near my sell limit price.
Also can I do this with the active trader screen? (trade tab, then active trader, type stock symbol and show active trader) I want to just click in the price and generate my sell order that way (the one you mentioned above). AS well as I want to see my sell order in the chart, can I do that?
As long as the limit order is *above* the current market price, the shares will not be sold immediately. So if the current price is $1.70 and you place an order to sell for $1.85, the order will not fill unless TOS can get $1.85 or higher. Yes, you can do this in the active trader trab but you must click on the "ask" column to generate the sell order.
I bought stock @ $1.05 and my target sell price is $1.89. Current stock price as today is $1.70. I will not able to seat in front of my pc all this week. I want to set a order to sell all my shares when price hit or cross above $1.89. How can I do that in thinkorswim? please help
If you currently own a stock, you can sell it by clicking the "bid" price, which creates the order entry. From there, you can set market or limit orders and time in force.
After that, click "confirm and send" button for the order confirmation screen. If the order is the way you want it, click "send."
You can also set TOS to send orders directly without using the confirmation windows but the above process is the standard way.
hi i just transfered from etrade to TOS and I saw that there is no "sell short" "buy to cover" option on the pull down menu. It just has "sell" or "buy". How does one short stocks with this software?
To short stocks in TOS, you just click on the bid and place a sell order. If you do not own the shares, TOS assumes it is a short sale.
TOS does this for speed. If you buy 100 shares of IBM and wish to go short 100 shares, you just need to enter ONE order to sell 200 shares.
However, if you are required to "sell short" as with most brokers, you would have to sell 100 shares then place a second order to sell short. 100 shares. That's 2 bid-ask spreads and 2 commissions.
Good question! First of all, realize that if you're a buyer, the "market" price is the asking price. Just because the last trade may be less than the asking price does not mean that you can necessarily trade for that price. The asking price is always the lowest price that someone is willing to sell for right now (which is why you can buy at that price). Clicking the asking price in TOS just creates a "buy" order and you can change the limit to anything you'd like.
Papermoney is a fully functional version of the real system. Papermoney trades, however, aren't real. This allows you to experiment with different strategies without the fear of losing money. Every Think or Swim account can log into the Papermoney version!
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professionaltrading 3 days ago
Great Video!!!
MrPromotionz 6 months ago
Hi, can someone show Me how to set up pair trading on the TOS demo platform..what TA studies I need?
WaterReignFire 11 months ago
Black screens are always hard to read.
TeraStellar 1 year ago
Hi, I'm new to the market (just started doing this this summer) and after hearing a professional investor say he uses Think or Swim I figured it must be reputable enough so I started an account. I started looking around with the paper money (thank goodness) and the place looked like a bloomin' labyrinth! I appreiate that there are videos that will illustrate how to do these things I'm trying to figure out. I'm saving this to my Understanding Options playlist so I can find your channel again.
Lavenderrose73 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Bill, great job on your podcasts, You have a great way to explain complex concepts to ordinary people and support them by out of life examples. Didn't know about your youtube videos until you recently mentioned it. This one's helped me a lot. Great job. Thank you, and keep it up.
shataann 1 year ago
Comment removed
shataann 1 year ago
Hi, I've been a long term Scott Trade Customer. There is really one trade that I would like to see ST offer and its a naked Put. I trade INTC quite a bit and would very much like to Sell puts each and every month. However the site tells me this is not allowed. Can you help?
Jamieboogiespencer 1 year ago
Many brokers do not allow naked put selling but you may wish to check. It may be an approval process you must go through. If they do not allow it, you could use covered calls since they are synthetically identical to selling puts. Although not as efficient, they have an identical payoff structure. That's because buying stock today with the obligation to sell (covered call) is the same as accepting an obligation today to buy shares in the future (naked put).
optionsatoz 1 year ago
@Jamieboogiespencer hope you stopped shorting intel, GPU-integrated tri-gate is the end of ARM, AMD and Nvidia
zstrizzel 8 months ago
@Jamieboogiespencer hope you stopped shorting intel, GPU-integrated tri-gate is the end of ARM, AMD and Nvidia
zstrizzel 8 months ago
@Jamieboogiespencer OptionsHouse does them I think.
kotapaka 4 months ago in playlist Think or Swim Tutorials
Type your stock ticker symbol into the quote box on the Trade Tab. Next, click the "bid" price, which generates a sell order template (which will be highligted in red at bottom of your screen.) On that red line, you'll see a column marked "order." Click on the drop-down menu and select LIMIT. Next, type your limit price of $1.89 in the "price" field. Select GTC from TIF menu (time in force) if you want the oder to be good-til-canceled.
optionsatoz 2 years ago
Comment removed
YouBDub 2 years ago
I think I did this a while back but when I placed the order, my shares were sold right away even do the price was not near my sell limit price.
Also can I do this with the active trader screen? (trade tab, then active trader, type stock symbol and show active trader) I want to just click in the price and generate my sell order that way (the one you mentioned above). AS well as I want to see my sell order in the chart, can I do that?
YouBDub 2 years ago
As long as the limit order is *above* the current market price, the shares will not be sold immediately. So if the current price is $1.70 and you place an order to sell for $1.85, the order will not fill unless TOS can get $1.85 or higher. Yes, you can do this in the active trader trab but you must click on the "ask" column to generate the sell order.
optionsatoz 2 years ago
I bought stock @ $1.05 and my target sell price is $1.89. Current stock price as today is $1.70. I will not able to seat in front of my pc all this week. I want to set a order to sell all my shares when price hit or cross above $1.89. How can I do that in thinkorswim? please help
YouBDub 2 years ago
ok how do you sell the stocks your just bought?
bdroudebush 2 years ago
If you currently own a stock, you can sell it by clicking the "bid" price, which creates the order entry. From there, you can set market or limit orders and time in force.
After that, click "confirm and send" button for the order confirmation screen. If the order is the way you want it, click "send."
You can also set TOS to send orders directly without using the confirmation windows but the above process is the standard way.
optionsatoz 2 years ago
hi i just transfered from etrade to TOS and I saw that there is no "sell short" "buy to cover" option on the pull down menu. It just has "sell" or "buy". How does one short stocks with this software?
CreedChrist 2 years ago
To short stocks in TOS, you just click on the bid and place a sell order. If you do not own the shares, TOS assumes it is a short sale.
TOS does this for speed. If you buy 100 shares of IBM and wish to go short 100 shares, you just need to enter ONE order to sell 200 shares.
However, if you are required to "sell short" as with most brokers, you would have to sell 100 shares then place a second order to sell short. 100 shares. That's 2 bid-ask spreads and 2 commissions.
optionsatoz 2 years ago
Lets say that the market price is lower than the ask price, why would you click on the ask value and buy at the higher price?
drslinky3219 2 years ago
Good question! First of all, realize that if you're a buyer, the "market" price is the asking price. Just because the last trade may be less than the asking price does not mean that you can necessarily trade for that price. The asking price is always the lowest price that someone is willing to sell for right now (which is why you can buy at that price). Clicking the asking price in TOS just creates a "buy" order and you can change the limit to anything you'd like.
optionsatoz 2 years ago
Papermoney is a fully functional version of the real system. Papermoney trades, however, aren't real. This allows you to experiment with different strategies without the fear of losing money. Every Think or Swim account can log into the Papermoney version!
optionsatoz 3 years ago
Good video, but I can't see anything.
924142707 2 years ago
what is the benefit of using the papermoney software over the web-based papermoney?
WeHaveNoUsername 3 years ago