 Let's make sure we're coming alive. We should be. And there we are. Nice, nice, nice. Hi everyone. This is Chih-chou. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Today, today is December 31st, 2021. And we're doing a live stream, open discussion. On, I'm going to take this down and do my headphones setup here. Hopefully you're getting the sound out of this. Let's check it out. Actually, I just had to turn this off. Boing, turn that off. Nice. I might plug this back in because we might watch a video. Hopefully this isn't going to be too noisy for you guys. I want to do it real nice and gentle, real nice and gentle. I hope it wasn't noisy. Oh, wait a second. That's right, I can't have it in. Because it's not the desktop. It's the audio here coming up, which is the mic. So good morning. It's 9 30am, December 31st, 2021. And welcome to the live stream. And today's live stream is personal finance live stream. Trading stocks on wall streets. Let's take a look at some options, chains. Basically, we're going to talk about trading options. Puts and calls. Very basic stuff. We're going to look at some numbers. We're going to track some stocks. We're going to look at some charts. We're going to talk about buying puts. We're going to talk about buying calls. And we're going to talk about straddling strategy, which is one of the strategies you can do for options trading. And since we're not going to touch on politics and current events, aside from trading stocks, we should be able to load this on to SensorTube. But if the discussion takes us anywhere where we can't talk about the stuff on SensorTube, we'll make a little announcement and let people know that this live stream, the full live stream, will only be available on Pitchy Rumble and Odyssey, but we should be able to load the whole thing on to SensorTube. The sensors should appreciate trading on Wall Street because Wall Street controls the sensors. That's an icicle falling down. It snowed a lot here last few days. So and it's been crazy cold. So we've been having icicles forming everywhere. And as we wait for notifications to go out, let me bring out the chat, see if anyone's popped in. Connectivity film. Happy New Year's Eve. Happy New Year's Eve to you as well. Connectivity film. How are you doing? I hope you're in a part of the world where you're allowed to go out and party. In Montreal, they just wanted to full curfew. So they're not allowing anybody, like just imagine being a restaurant owner or a pub or whatever. You spend all this money for New Year's celebration. The government comes out and says, the night before the party is supposed to begin, you sold all these tickets. You spent all this money. The government comes out and says, lockdown, curfew, no party. Wow. What are you going to do about it? Felix, how are you doing? What's up, Chichou? I'm currently setting up my DJ equipment and cleaning my house to prep for around 40 people coming for a New Year's party. Wish me luck, good luck, brother. That should be a blast. You should livestream that stuff. Let people enjoy your music, enjoy the party, because some people are not going to get the opportunity. And as we wait for people to pop in, San Diego connectivity, we are having a board game night. Nice. Jumanji diplomacy. Oh my God, you're going to play diplomacy on New Year's Eve. You're going to lose friends, man. Card games, card games against humanity. Card game? Cards against humanity. Cards against humanity. I don't know that game. Card games are fantastic, of course. Maybe there should be a little bit of moulin on the line as well. It is the New Year. Coming out to the New Year, people might be wanting to test out their luck. Elegant. We are crazy connected. If you guys have never played diplomacy, playing diplomacy could be quite brutal. Elegant. Happy New Year to everyone. Happy New Year to everyone. Oh yeah, you guys are... No, no, you're not in New Year's yet. You're New Year's Eve. You guys are partying already. Elegant. Have you hit the cider yet? And again, while we wait for notifications to go out, we are on Patreon, right? So if you want to follow this work, Patreon is a great way to do so. If you want to support this work, Patreon is a great way to do so. And we do have a subscribe star page again as well. Lord Raiden, thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub. Appreciate it. Matthew Cabira. Happy New Year's Eve. Happy New Year's Eve. Day... Morning for me. Morning for us. And we do have a couple of friends, a couple coming over. We had a couple come over last night. We had some food and talked about things. And tonight we're going to have some food, talk about things. My partner's going to play some music. Oh, you haven't hit the cider yet? Elegant. Fun, fun, fun. Well, it is the day of the year, if you're going to hit it up. And for those of you who either supported this work on Patreon, gang, thank you very much for the support. I appreciate the support. And I know a lot of people do as well. Six hours and 24 minutes to go. Nice, nice, nice. For us, it's 14 hours and 24 minutes to go. And we are live streaming on Twitch, twitch.tv forward slash teach your life. If you want to participate in these live streams, as they're happening, Twitch is where you want to be at. And the first time chat, Lord Raiden 7. I have following you for years. I love your content and wish you a happy new year. Thank you very much, Lord. Happy new year to you and your loved ones as well. I hope you guys have a fantastic 2022. Should be an interesting year of nothing else. Just like 2020 and 2021. We'll see how things play out. We'll see how things play out. And as always gang, thank you very much for being on Twitch. Thank you for following this work. Thank you for subbing. Thank you for coming here, participating in discussion, sharing information and mods. Thank you for taking care of business. Thank you for taking care of business. Protect the earth. Lord Raiden, protector of the earth. We do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on Mines, VK Gap, Parler, Geter and BitCloud. Free speech, social networks, and you can follow the work there as well. We do have discord page. You can comment to our chat anytime you want and type in exclamation mark discord and the link invite will be there as well as the links will be there in the platforms, on the platforms, the description of the platform, in the description of videos, on the platforms that we'll be loading this live stream on. And we will be uploading the audio of this live stream to soundcloud.com forward slash chico as a podcast and this podcast should be available in your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify, iTunes and Google play. Okay. And this live stream should be, most likely will be available in this entirety on SensorTube. If not, you can find it on Pichu, Rumble and Odyssey as always. Welcome to another live stream game. The Kez. How are you doing? Hello gentlemen, gentle women's fun. Lord, nice to meet you, Elder God. I pray you aren't Sensor Shanax. Sensor Shanax. I don't know what that refers to. Let me take these things down. And I'm not sure what type of how many people we're going to get today with these live streams or for this live stream, because it is New Year's Day. People have plans, activities that they're dealing with. So it is the last trading day of the year. And usually trading on Wall Street is pretty quiet on certain days of the year. This being one of them is usually fairly quiet time. Things should kick up hardcore. My guess at the beginning of 2022. Which way the markets go is anybody's guess. My advice to anyone is to hedge your bets. Try to hedge your bets. Play the movements. It is, in my opinion, it is not. Aside from certain sectors of the market, certain stocks, it's not really necessarily a hold, buy and hold strategy. It's a trader's market right now. And I believe it will be for quite some time to come. Okay. And some sectors should be avoided. Some sectors I believe should be invested in. And what we're going to do, I've set up, we're going to take a look at the desktop. And for some reason I just can't have the pop-up chat. I have it on this side. The chat is showing up on the screen here as well. But I do have it popped. But for some reason I can't keep it on top for some reason. Top of the other windows. So what we're going to do. Here, let me show you the the angles that we're going to use. Now, this is the video we got. Right. And if we take this off, we got the desktop happening here as well. Right. So let me bring out the chat. And you can see the chat on this side disappears. Right. And I'm bringing it back up again. So you can see it that way I can read it. But every time I click on a new window here, we're going to see the chat disappear. All right. So I'll keep on going between the windows and the chat pop them up again. Okay. And basically I have some tabs open for different platforms, different websites I use to do analysis, do trades. Right. One of the ones I end up using is, for example, MarketWatch. Where basically I've queued up Alcoa that we can take a look at. See what the stock is doing. Okay. So basically you can use, hopefully this is coming out. Okay. You can use MarketWatch or whatever platform you want. I usually use MarketWatch pre-market open. See what the stocks are doing after hours or before the markets open. Right. And after the markets close. Right. These things open up usually four a.m. my time or five a.m. You know, the activity begins east coast time of my time anyway, which is, you know, eight, eight o'clock east coast time. So an hour, hour and a half before the markets open, you can see, start seeing activity on certain stocks. And for another hour and a half, hour to hour and a half after the markets close, you continue to see certain activity after hours because, you know, companies release news and financials and updates and stuff. So markets either before market opens or after market closes. So you see movements happening. And what you can do with MarketWatch, you can go to advance charting here. Right. And you can take a look at the market, you know, what the stocks been doing here in this one day, five day, you can do five day, and it does the adjustments. You can do one month. It does the adjustments. You can do six months, three months, one year. And take a look at what a stock has done. Right. All goes down fantastic in the last couple of years. Right. Here's a three year chart. And it bottomed out at five and a half. Right. Now it's sitting at $60, right. 10 plus time, 11 times return in basically two year period, less than two year period, which is fantastic. But one thing you can do with the stocks here, a hit the advanced charts. Right. What the advanced charts does, you can see the different time frames. You can take a look at the charts for one day, five day, 10 day, one month, three month. By default, it goes to six months. And you can overlay some metrics on here. And these are some metrics that have overlaid previously. And this is what you sort of see. Right. You can see the momentum, the sort of different metrics that you can take a look at if it's overbought, oversold, RSI and whatnot. And two of the things that you should be looking at, which is a 50 day moving average, either exponential or simple moving average and the 200 day moving average. Right. And one thing I like about market watch, the blue line that you see here, okay, the light blue anyway is what the stock price is doing. So that's the top one is 59, 64. And then you have the black is the 50 day moving average and the 200 day moving average is in light green, which is sort of a crappy color to pick. It doesn't come out as nice. And you can see where the stock is sitting in regards to its activity. Right. And before we forget, King, one thing we should always keep in mind is everything that is happening in our world is related to information, basically information coming out from centralized capital is power. So if we really want to be able to see ourselves into a prosperous future, we really need to have transparency and accountability of capitalist power, which is one reason we really need to work towards freeing Assange, Julian Assange. Right. Because he is a journalist and a publisher that is being persecuted, crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. Right. So never forget the mantra really that we need to work towards freeing Julian Assange and that will free humanity. Right. And for more information, you can check out WikiLeaks.org, Defend.WikiLeaks.org or Julian Assange and WikiLeaks playlist on censor too. Right. So this is one thing you can do. You can take a look at the charts and see if something's overbought, oversold sometimes. Right. So you might want to buy it if it's oversold down here and ride it up to a position where it's overbought and then you can sell it or you can buy calls when it's oversold and buy puts when it's overbought, betting that it's going to go down or sell puts when it's oversold. And there's a whole bunch of strategies you can do. Right. So this is the alcohol chart. One thing you can do with Alcoa stock here is, I mean, you can use Google as well. It's simple. Right. Very simple chart. This used to have metrics on it that you could put on, but it doesn't anymore. Google being what they are, they've killed off a lot of the options they had on their websites on their tools for people to have ease of access to information. Can we look at the stock Intel? For sure. We'll take a look at Intel Sleepy Waves. And gang, by the way, if you guys, if there's a stock you want to take a look at, we'll take a look at it. Right. I just queued up Alcoa because Alcoa is a stock that I've been following. Okay. And family has been playing the ups and downs with puts and calls on it. Right. And not necessarily straddling it, but because it's not worth the straddle to a certain degree. Alcoa sort of trades at a fairly predictable pattern. Right. Which is sort of what you're looking for if you're doing this type of trading. Now, what you see here, and by the way, Sleepy Waves, we'll take a look at Intel as soon as I just run you through what I've opened up here with my tabs. Right. And what you have here with a stock, right, for those that don't know, and here's in Alcoa's options, right, puts and calls. This is Q-Trade that you can do on. And I like the way it presents itself. Right. But before we get into the options, one thing you want to do is, if you don't know what options are, here is a link to Investopedia. Investopedia. Okay. If you're in the chat in Investopedia, and I'll probably provide the link in the description of this video once it's been uploaded to our video sharing platforms, as well as the audio on SoundCloud. Okay. And this is the page for Essential Options Trading Guide. And it sort of runs you through what options are. And options are basically a derivative, right, that you can buy, which is a secondary bet on a stock where it's got a time constraint on it. And one option in general is equivalent to 100 shares of stock, right? So it's really linked up with Fraction or Reserve Banking. It's very much on the same level if you know anything about Fraction or Reserve Banking, where banks can loan out 100 times or more of the amount of cash they have on hand that deposit, right? So options you can think about as if you end up buying one option, one option for a certain stock, maybe puts or calls, is basically gives you control over 100 shares, okay? Over a certain amount of time, okay? So that's what options are. Now, if you're betting that a stock is going to go up, they call those options calls, right? If you're betting that a stock is going to go down, they call those options puts, okay? And this page has videos in there as well, but what we'll do, we'll just read the key points here, okay? Key takeaways. And by the way, before we continue anymore, my internet has been kicking in and out in the morning, early morning was kicking in and out. It's snowed here a lot, it's cold and whatnot. So if there's any interruptions of the live stream breaks, my apologies sort of beyond my control and I will try to come back up again as soon as we can, right? If not today, we'll continue this discussion in a future day, right? But here's the key takeaways from options trading and we're just going to read this from investopedia, right? So key takeaways, point one, an option is a contract given the buyer the right, the right, but not the obligation, which is extremely important, but not the obligation to buy in the case of a call or sell in the case of a put, the underlying asset at a specific price on or before a certain date. And we're going to expand on this, we'll take a look at this, right? Point two, people use options for income to speculate and to hedge risk, right? And when it mentions people use options for income, basically those are people that are either writing calls or writing puts, right? Basically, what that means is if a stock is going up, right? And you think the stock is going to go up, what you can do is sell puts short, basically, naked, sell puts and take that money and bank it. And usually you don't extend it over too long of a period. Usually you're selling basically using as an income basis for a shorter timeframe, right? Because you can't really predict too far into the future in certain markets, right? So you can either, if a stock is going up, you can write puts, right? Basically, sell them without having them. And because it's a time-constrained instrument, right, derivative, over a certain time it goes down to zero and if you sold it, then you made money, right? So if you sold a put at two dollars and after a certain time the put expires, you banked that two dollars. And the same can be said if the stock is going down, if the stock is going down, you can write calls on it, right? If you sell a call at two dollars and the stock never goes up, that call is banking the money because it's going to go down to zero, right? That's the income part of it. Speculation is just basically either writing puts and calls shorting them or buying them straight up, put some calls and betting that a stock is going to go up or down. Hedging risk is basically if you've got a position in a stock, right? And you think there might be some bad news coming, but you don't want to pull out of that stock for multiple reasons. One of them being you don't want to pay taxes, right? If you had a lot of gains, if you sell a stock, then you have to realize those capital gains, right? So you don't want to necessarily realize the capital gain just in case there's going to be a hiccup in the company, in stock, right? In the price of the stock. So what you can do is if you're betting the stock is going to go up and you want to lock in your profits, you can buy puts, which basically means that you're going to bet that the stock is going to go down for a short period of time or a long period of time. It doesn't make a difference. And if the stock goes down, then you can sell the put and that difference, right? That difference, you didn't really lose because the stock went down. You just covered it with your put and the other way around, right? If the stock is going down and you think it's going to go down a lot further, but there might be some news coming in that might push the stock high, you might end up buying calls for it. And if the stock does a bump, right? Then you made that difference. You made money off that and you can sell that and then wait until the hype is over and the stock continues this downward trend, right? So those are what income, speculate and hedge imply, right? Are referring to. The other point, options are known as derivatives because they derive their value from an underlying asset and that should be self-explanatory because you're not really investing in something in a tangible asset like a stock, right? Stock in a company, you're doing a secondary bet on that thing, right? So for example, if you see two people flipping coins, right? For $100 a pop, right? Flip a coin. One person's calling has the other one's calling tails, right? Well, those people are playing for $100 a pop, but the audience can make secondary bets on the flip, right? So a couple of other people that are watching these guys flipping a coin might decide to say, hey, listen, I'm willing to give you two to one odds that the guy flipping a coin is going to get two heads in a row and one person may take the bet, right? And because that's happening, the odds are more, right? So that person, when he takes the bet, he'll put $100 up and because this person gave two to one odds, if the person flipping a coin doesn't get heads twice in a row, the person that offered the option, right, will lose $200 and the person that took the option bet wins the $200 and takes his $100 back, right? And flip the flip. The person does flip two heads in a row. The guy who put up $200 wins $100 from the other guy. That's the way you should think about derivatives and there's multiple layers of derivatives, right? The stock market has a certain amount of value being played on it, but the derivatives market is a few orders of magnitude larger than that. Okay, it's huge. So if when you see liquidity completely die out in the market, it means the derivative market is being destroyed or there's a lot of people making a lot of money, which is usually a two-way trade, right? It does happen. Lonely Piggy, how are you doing? Hello, Chichou and Chad. Hope everyone's having a good New Year's Eve so far. Indeed, good New Year's morning for me. I'm eating pastries, mom's pastries. I'll show you guys in the big screen. Super delicious, super delicious. First time, Chad. Im lumbou, Im lumbou. Hey, Chichou, first time chatting you live I'm interested in what family is currently invested in. I am still more puts than calls. Indeed, okay. Im lumbou, family right now is, I forget what the percentage is. There's been a lot of trading going on. As far as equities is concerned, families probably holding 40% of the portfolio in equities. Maybe, let's say 50% of portfolio in equities. Majority of those are cannabis stocks because I think they've had a bottom. The family thinks they've had a bottom. So cannabis stocks are the majority of holdings in the family's equity position. The other 50% is options and from that 45% is puts, okay. So about, not 45%, from that 95% is put. So basically 45% of the portfolio isn't puts right now, which is a huge bet, huge gamble with a possibility of substantial losses. But if it goes the right way, a possibility of gigantic returns, okay. That's approximately what the family's position is right now. And the puts are encompassing some high-end fang stocks, tech stocks, as well as some industrials as well, okay. As well as some consumers, consumer goods, textiles, if you want to call it, right. The fourth point they have here, gotcha. Thanks so much. Still have puts on Twitter, still have puts on Twitter, indeed. Sold out of puts, families sold out of puts, family obtained put positions in Twitter when it was in the 60s and 70s, low 70s. And sold out in the low 50s, right. Sold out a little too early, but it's locked in profits. Twitter went down to 43, 42. It bounced to around 44. And the family just acquired puts, some more puts on it this week, right. And since we're towards the end of the week, you can guess when it was. Early week as well as later week, 44 dollar week trade. And they're longer time frame, because short time frame, it might still pop up. But on the longer basis, I don't think Twitter has a hope in hell of retaining its value market cap, okay. Possibly, high gamble, right. The fourth point in these key takeaways is a stock option contract typically represents 100 shares of the underlying stock. But options may be written on any sort of underlying asset from bonds to currencies to commodities. And I've never played the, you know, Forex. I've never played options on bonds, currencies or commodities. Only puts and calls as well as for stocks, equities, as well as straddling, right. Which is basically betting that a stock is, you know, is going to do movement. Okay. That's what you're looking for when you're buying puts and calls. You're looking for movement. Because with options, you basically, it's a time sensitive bet, right. The longer you hold, every day that goes by, you lose a little bit of your value on your options, right. And as you get closer to the expiry date, the option value drops significantly. Okay. So that's sort of the underlying takeaway from this. And when you control 100 shares, just think about it this way. If you buy one option for a certain company, you control 100 shares. So if the stock price at that company does a $1 movement, you didn't just make $1 if it's on the way up or lose $1 on the way down. You made $100 or lost $100, right. If a stock moves $10, you control the 100 shares, then that's $1,000, right. And there's time sensitivity in there. There's what do you call it, the premium you're paying for it and whatnot. But that's sort of the base way you can think about it. And on this page, there's videos that you can listen to, what are options, and they run you through it. Options as derivatives, calls and put options, call option example, more videos, put option example. And you can go through it buying, selling calls and puts, buy call, sell call, all these things that you can do. And then secondary, hedging your bet, straddling, whatnot. So there's a whole bunch of information there. And I'll link it up just in case anybody has popped in more recently. Now that's clear. Okay. This is, let's take a look at Alcoa. Now this is the days movement on Alcoa on Google, right. Here's the five day movement on Alcoa. Here's the one month movement on Alcoa. Here's the six month movement on Alcoa. Here's the one year movement on Alcoa, which would be the same as the year to date. YTD is the year to date, right. And it's up 160%. Okay. And here's the five year movement on Alcoa. And if you actually went up like a year and a half, Alcoa is up much more than 150%. It's actually up a thousand percent. Okay. Because it's up 10 times its value. Okay. So that's the movement on Alcoa. And you can take a look at, you know, this chart here and it for me, come on. Come, come. There we go. And I put the metrics on here and the metrics you should be looking at to see what you want to do. Now, if you look at Alcoa right now, if you were betting, you might decide that the stock is going to go up higher or you might decide that stock is going to go lower. I can tell you that family right now has puts on Alcoa. Okay. So family is betting that the stock is going to go down. Now what are these bets like? So for example, Alcoa is a time sensitive thing, right? Let me do a little refresh here. Give you the most recent price. You do a real refresh. This is Q trade. And Alcoa is up 62 cents today. But Alcoa was down actually today as well, right? So you can go to overview and see what the stock has done over just today, right? It opened at 59.16. It went right here, 59.16. And it went as low as 58.70. Okay. And right now it's trading at 59. So I'll bring it down. 59.84, right? So there's been over a dollar fluctuation just today on Alcoa, right? And it gives you some other metrics. There's a PE of 13.88. It's got a beta of 2.74. Beta is how, you know, movement, yearly high. It's basically sitting at a yearly high. Yesterday it was at the yearly, two days ago it was at a yearly high and whatnot, right? It's got the 50 day moving average volume and all that jazz. You can take a look at, right? You can also come on this and click on, you know, the chart. And on this, you see the fluctuation and family has already saved some metrics on here, just to be able to see what's going on. And I like the view here because it's cleaner. And the light blue line that you see here is the 50 day moving average. This is the stock price right here. This is the 200 day moving average. This is the relative strength, right? So momentum behind it. This is a Williams indicator. This is momentum, but that's a relative strength. And here's the, I call this McDonald's, it's not McDonald's. MACD indicator, right? And usually when, as far as I see it, when the stock does this, it could continue to have the separation, but you're looking for a rollover of the black line into the red line. And that sort of gives you an indication that the stock might be under pressure. Okay. And you can go into the options. And with the options, because this is a time sensitive thing, every Friday options expire, right? And this is, let me just check the chat. Make sure there's no questions here. What's the trajectory for Q1? The trajectory for Q1. Are you referring to beat their financials? Is that what you're asking about? And why did you type that out? Just talking about the time sensitive to be of this thing. This is Q4 2021. And then this is the last Friday of the year, right? That these options are going to be traded. And you can take a look at here. What you see here in the light green up here, okay? The calls, by the way, the calls are on this side, on the left side of the graph. And the puts are on the right side of the graph for me anyway. If you're seeing it, it might be flipped around on your screen, right? So on this side over here, these guys on this side, these are the calls. And on this side, these are the puts, right? Now, these calls and puts expire today, right? That's why you're seeing a huge fluctuation here, right? Because when the stock was down, like for example, the value of the puts for Alcoa, strike price of 60. And the strike price of 60 means you're allowed to sell Alcoa at $60, okay, today. And if the stock is a lot lower, all of that is the premium. You're collecting money on it, right? So if the stock all of a sudden drops to $55 today, right? You just made $5 or $4.68 if you are able to buy Alcoa options to put at $0.32, right? So the difference you would pay, you're allowed to sell it at $60. And if the stock is sitting at, you're allowed to sell it at $50 and the stock is sitting at $55, that's a $5 money banked, right? Now, what you see here is the calls, which is you have the right to buy Alcoa at $60. The calls are even worth less because right now Alcoa is trading less than $60. So if Alcoa goes up to $65, for example, right? And if you're able to buy the call at $0.18, then you made $4.82 profit on that deal if it goes up to $0.65, which is not going to do, right? Now, some people might be selling these calls at, if you can get it, for people who are willing to sell it for $0.21, right? At $0.60 strike price, right? So that means the people selling these calls at $0.21, right? Are betting that Alcoa is not going to close at $60 above $60 and $0.42 because the $0.21 is the premium that they're paying for it, which is how many hours left, four and a half hours left in the trading day, right? So it's sort of playing fluctuations, right? Now that's today the price on it, right? Quarter one for the market. You know what? I don't know what it is. I don't know what it is. It's fairly, the market is expecting it to be fairly high. Financials, we can go to financials. I usually don't look at what the expectation is, what they're expecting. I go with what I'm expecting, right? Some people, if they're going to miss their numbers or they're going to make their numbers, is that what you're asking, Pete? I thought you were more into crypto. I'm not trading crypto, no, Pete, for multiple reasons. Now this thing expires today. These puts and calls, calls and puts. Now you can use different websites to get the same information. Here's Yahoo Finance, right? And this is the view of Strattle, which is sort of the same view as QTrade that has it here, right? Which is, you can take a look at it and here's the Strattle trades going through. Same thing we're talking about right here, right? Here's the, again, on this side is the calls and on this side is the puts. And this isn't in real time. The QTrade right now would be in real time. Let's do a little refresh on it. Let's see what we get. Okay. So a little refresh. It says the last traded was $0.15 and the last traded was $0.36, right? If you look at Yahoo, it says the last traded was $0.43, right? And this is $0.17 for the call and $0.43 for the put, right? So if you were holding the puts on Alcoa at $0.60 expiring today and you didn't sell earlier today, you lost 60 percent of your value. If you were holding the calls and it would suck if you were holding the calls, you would have already lost 43 percent of your bet, right? Now, one thing you have to consider, this number here, let's take a look at this thing. This is how much was traded today, okay? And this is the open interest. This guy's here, okay? Open interest. Now, there's one thing that happens with options is usually there's a saying that says the market likes to inflict the most amount of pain to a trader. So the market usually likes to close. I don't want to say usually, but the market, a stock usually, not usually, but sometimes tends to close at a strike price where there's been the most amount of activity, puts and calls, open interest, right? In this case, it's not because there's 9,300 calls, open interest on Alcoa at $65 strike price, right? So it's right now going to be closing lower than where the most amount of activity was on it. Now, we didn't take a look at this to see how much of that was traded yesterday, okay? I'm just going to read a comment. I am asking what you think will happen to the market next year. Oh, what do you think I'm going to beat? I mentioned this earlier on. Right now, family, about 50% of family's portfolio is in options. 95% of that is in puts. So about 45% or 90% is in puts. So 45% of the options play, the play in the family's portfolio is puts. So the family is betting that the market is going to have a serious hiccup. That's our take, okay? Sleep with Chico. Do you have any advice on a resource to learn how to trade? I've been trying to find on YouTube, but the finest gurus on there are terrible, in my opinion, just like I don't align with their values and morals. It's hard to find a stock trader with a conscious. Yeah, Wall Street doesn't have a conscience. Market does not have a conscience. Market will be happy to make money on a billion people dying, just as much as it will be happy to make money on one person living. Market doesn't care. For us, our family, there is a conscience at play here. So for example, the family has played puts on Moderna, but even when Moderna is oversold, the family does not buy calls on Moderna, because we don't want to make money on people dying. But we've talked about Moderna, our current events, live streams, right? Beat, you're moving like that. I like your style, thanks, Beat. Why do you think the market will dump? What's the particular reason? Multiple reasons, multiple reasons. Currency crisis, national currency crisis, one supply chain being broken as another. Draconian, fascistic governments in power is being another. Resistance rising up is being another. Possible wars, a lot, a lot. And the market's being completely overvalued. We're in bubble territory up the yin and yang, to say the least, right? So this is one place you can look at. Here's the Yahoo one. You can look at this as well. Remember, this doesn't give it to you in real time. The value of Alcoa is in real time switching. It should be anyway, but it doesn't update the options in real time. And you can change the view on the Yahoo view. Instead of straddle, you can look at it in list position. And in list position basically gives you all the call options in one location above and all the put options below options chain, right? Now, and then you can go to, here's the NASDAQ. You can look at the same thing. Straddling. The straddle look, which is basically, here, let's do a little refresh on this. See what the latest price is. And yeah, it gives you the prices up 55 cents. And Alcoa right now, it went down in price. So previously, here, the option, oh, this one we did here. We'll do it on this one. For example, Alcoa put option expiring today was trading at 36 cents, right? Right here, right? We didn't do a refresh on this, but you know, it's been sitting here for like 30 minutes, right? And Alcoa was up, was up. We might have done, did we do a refresh? I don't know. But basically it was up, let's say 60 cents, right? So the put option was trading at 36 cents. Right now, Alcoa is up 55 cents, and the put option is now at trading at 49 cents, right? So the value of the put option went up because, oh, come on, I clicked on it so it took me here. So the value of the put option went up because the stock went down, right? And over here, you're seeing the same thing. The value of the put option was 49 cents. So this thing here, let's do a little refresh here. So Alcoa is up 55 cents, right? Let's do a little refresh. Hopefully it's changed. It should be changing in real time, but no, it's still a 55. Well, we'll come back to this, right? So keep those numbers in mind. And one thing you need to consider as well, Alcoa price because it's aluminum, my name, right? Fluctuate based on the price of aluminum. So if you're trading something, you really want to take a look at the underlying metrics that sort of govern what the price of the stock is, right? So if you take a look at this thing, aluminum prices peaked in October at $3,200, right? But if you look at the Alcoa price, okay, wait, okay, it's got to fluctuate a little bit. So if you look at the price, here's the October price, Alcoa price peaking here at $57, right? Aluminum prices right now are sitting at $2,800, right? So it's about $300 less than when aluminum prices peaked. But Alcoa stock is actually sitting higher than the previous peak, right? So take that whichever way you want, okay? So that's sort of the general gist of taking a look at these things to a certain degree, right? What do you think? Wouldn't currency crisis lead more to hyper... It would lead to a hyperinflation but I think there would be... What would happen if there's a currency crisis? The stock market will go up and it has in some places because people are wanting to buy tangible goods, right? Something tangible because the value of the money is coming down. So if there's hyperinflation, you don't want to be sitting on money, you want to be buying something and the markets will buy stocks or cars or real estate or whatever collectibles, right? You want to move the money, right? However, if there is inflation... Now, I'm not expecting hyperinflation in the United States. Inflation, there's definitely there, right? In double digits, it's not just 6% or whatever it is, right? But what that does as well is take liquidity away from the markets. So there's a fine line between hyperinflation and inflation, right? Micro twist. Happy New Year Chichou and Chats. Happy New Year to you as well. Micro twist. It was New Year's Eve in Japan three hours ago. Happy New Year to Japan. I'm pretty sure they were able to party hardy without any restrictions, right? Which is fantastic. Lark Bark. Happy New Year, my friend. Happy New Year to you as well. Lark Bark. A7. But not in Tokyo. I was in Japan. Micro twist. I was in Japan 2003. Spent New Year's Eve. Nice. I didn't make it to Japan when I should have made it to Japan. I have friends there for a while. Hong Kong in 1985. Den Pa Yuki 311. I spent New Year's Eve 2018 in Japan. But I was sick. Oh no. Was that sick because you were drinking too much at that? Is it kayak bars and stuff? Is that what you did? What do you mean it takes liquidity from the markets? It takes liquidity from the markets. So for example, sleepy waves. If a family needs to buy food and fruit prices are double what they were a month ago and their wages haven't doubled, then they have to take money out of their investments to be able to buy food, right? So it freezes up certain parts of the economy, right? So if you were thinking about going buying textiles, clothes, right? And prices have doubled in the last month. And you don't have enough, you know, you only have enough money to buy food, then you're not going to go buy a new t-shirt or a shirt if prices have doubled if you need to feed the family. So you'll spend the money on the food, but you will not spend money on discretionary items, right? So you have to account for that. Now sleepy waves. You wanted to look at Intel, right? So let's take a look at Intel. Let's do a little looksie here. And by the way, let's do a quick look for Lululemon. Just because Lululemon is down that much, which is good since family has put on Lululemon. Let's take a look at Moderna. Moderna was up today. Moderna is up $5.40. So what's going on? That's an indicator, by the way, Microsoft. Microsoft. Family has put on Microsoft. Microsoft was actually down $3 earlier today and is crawling back up again, right? What else? What else? What else? What else? Well, let's look at Intel. INTC. Here's INTC. Let's bring up, you know what? We'll close the NASDAQ website for options. We're not going to use that. We'll keep the Yahoo open. We don't want that. We want Intel. INTC. Intel. And we'll bring up Intel here as well. INTC. And let's look at the chart for Intel, first of all. Okay. And here's, because it's a simple look, we'll take a look at it. And on Google, because it gives you a clean. It's not busy, right? So here's the Intel chart. So Intel chart, last year, it peaked at around $68, right? And it's sitting at around $51, $52 right now. Okay. It's got a market cap of $210 billion, a P of 10%, and a yield dividend of 2.69%. Okay. You can come down here. You can look at what the financials were on a quarterly basis. So they had revenue of $19 billion, net income of $6.8 billion, cost of revenue of $8.45 billion. You can see all these metrics. This is the quarterly. And here's the annual. Okay. Annual, they had $77 billion in sales. Net income of $20 billion. Okay. Down, you know, 0.71% from the previous year. Cash on hand of $7 billion, cost of revenue, $34 billion. Right? So that's the general chart for a year. Here's the general chart for five years. And here's the max chart for Intel. It does a lot of fluctuations and it's looking like this. And it looks like just basic. It looks like it's sitting on some kind of support. Right? Let's go back here and let's look at the technicals on this. Some of the technicals anyway. What Lulu Lemon is clothing company in Vancouver. Those are icicles falling. Clothing company in a headquarters in Vancouver, British Columbia. It's overpriced, in my opinion. It's the, the clothing is, I knew someone, I know someone in textile industry and they say it's cheap, cheap ass shit. Right? But it's got a huge market cap and people buy it. They're one of the reasons that people buy it. And my friend in the textile industry mentioned this. She had the opportunity to work for Lulu Lemon when they first started, by the way. And basically she told me that people buy Lulu Lemon product because it's, it's high end, high end expensive meaning. Right? So it's for people who have extra cash to spend. And it makes, this is her, a paraphrasing, her wording. It makes women's asses perk. So women like buying it because it perks up their bums. It makes their bodies look better than what, more fit than what they are. Right? So it's a smoke and mirror thing, but they do have serious revenue. They have stores all over the world and they make good income. Right? DEMPA YOKI. No, just a boring kind of sick, unfortunately. Oh, no, boring sick. Not the exciting stuff. So here's Intel. Right? This is a six month chart on it. Right? You can take a look at it. It popped above the 50 day moving average and then most likely, if we do the earnings, you can add a new metric here. Overlay. Where's the overlay? Chart overlay. Let's see if we can put the earnings on here. Where's the earnings? Price, parabolic, moving average. Simple moving. Hey, where's the earnings? Events. Oh, there it is. Events, earnings. Let's put the earnings on here. There it is. You see this major drop here? That was most likely they missed their earnings. Right? So the stock does drop. Now before we put that on, that's what we're looking at. Right? But when you see a drop like this, it's usually an announcement. Or usually it's a warning, or they actually came out with their earnings and they missed their numbers or expected numbers. Right? So it's a good idea. If you're seeing major, major movements in a stock to see what took place. Right? And right now this is where Intel's sitting, channeling between the 200-day and the 50-day moving averages. Right? And here's the one-year chart for it. Right? It looks like it might be bottoming out. Okay? And we can definitely take a look at the chart here as well, Intel. Here. Let me take a look at the chart and some of the metrics that we've set up. Just to see. Oh yeah, by the way here. Let me go back one more. And you can look at different stuff. Right now, analyst rating, there's nine people, let's say, it's a buy right here. Right? Oops. Right here. Right? Nine people say that's a buy. Two people say that it's overweight. 21 analysts are saying, because it's one of the major tech companies, it's got major coverage. 21 people are saying, just hold it. And six people are saying, sell it. Right? Now, we can take a look at the charts here as well and do one-year chart on it. And you can take a look. It's showing the same thing. Right? For us, this is just a moving average that I've plotted on here, put on here. So it's sitting well below the 200-day moving average, but a little bit above the 50-day moving average. Here it is here. Now, would I be betting that this stock is going to go up? Let's see the 200-year chart on it. Here's the two-year chart. Let's do a five-year chart on it. Five-year chart. Refresh. Yeah, it could go either way. But the odds are it won't do serious heavy movement. And then you can take a look at the options and see the premiums on it. And Intel, again, this is trading at what? 51.69. So what you see here is sitting between 51.5 and 52. Right? So people are betting one way or another. There's lots of activity going on here. Right? 5,000 trades and stuff. But you can take a look at, for example, two months out of February. Okay? February, it's saying that if you're going to bet that... Let's pick a nice number. It's sitting at 51.70. So it's between... It's closer to 52.5. Right? So if you're betting, if you want to bet that this stock is going to go up, right? And you want to buy calls for it for the next two months. Right? You're going to pay... You're going to pay... Let's say take what is being offered at, or what the trade at that last bid asked. This is the last trade. $1.77. Right? So right now, $1.77 is the... If it's going to go down, you're going to have to pay $1.77 to be able to control 100 shares of Intel. Right? On the way down. Right? So you have to pay $1.77 to have the right to sell Intel at $50 a share. If that's the case, then you only make money. Right? If Intel trades is sitting at 48.33. Right? 20... No, sorry. 50 minus that 3.3... Yeah, 48.33 you break even. Right? Because the difference between 48.33 and 50 is $1.77. If Intel closes below 48.33, you're making money. Right? So for example, if Intel drops down to $40 by February... February 18th. You see the date here? February 18th, 2020. If it drops down to $40, then you go $10 difference, because you bought the rice to sell it at $50. That's $10 you can sell Intel stock for, but you paid $1.77. So what you can do is go $10... Here, let's bring up the calculator. $10 minus $1.77. That means you made $8.23. Right? If Intel drops $10 in the next two months... Okay? A little bit less than two months, actually, because we're going to January 1st. So month and three weeks, let's say. Right? What is that relative to... What type of return is that? So $8.233 minus $1.77. Divided by $1.77. That's 3.65 times return on investment. Return on your money. Right? Now, if you're betting that the stock is going to go up... Right? You can buy calls on Intel at $50 a share for $3.25. That means Intel stock has to close at least $53.25 for you to break even, and anything above that is premium that you're making. That's the way you can think about it. Ronnie, you got some top comic. Comic, right? I wish I'd gotten the Spiderman Carnage comic, but I'm still happy with what I got. Ronnie says, Ronnie, what did you get? You got... I can't remember what you got. And by the way, hi Ronnie, how you doing? Hey Chico, I received your package. Well, thanks again. Ah, awesome Ronnie. Glad you got it. Oh, oh, how are you doing? Welcome to another live stream. I'm surprised they don't seem to have been affected by the global microchip shortage. Supposed to be Intel's coming up with some new stuff, and they were affected by the global shortage to a certain degree, because take a look at this. This is the one year chart, and oh, come on, it's refreshing again. Come, come, hurry, hurry. There we go. Oh, Intel's closed down now. It was up $55. Nice, we're going to take a look at this. So take a look at this thing. At the sixth month, on October 21st, they announced their earnings and the stock dropped. Stock dropped, so they were probably affected by the shortage supply chain issues. Right? So let's take a look at Intel options. So Intel was up $0.55. Right? Now it's down $0.05. Let's see, hey, where did the options go on it? Oh, it kicked us out of the options. Options. Let's take a look at the options. Come on. Load, load. My internet's really slow. Here's the option. Here's what the, ah, let's look at the straddle. Look, I don't use Yahoo too much for options. There, we're looking at the 52 one, weren't we? What were we looking at? We're 50, oh crap. I forgot which one we're looking at. Where is the Intel? Yeah, we're looking at the 51. Oh, hold on. Let's bring up. It was a 52 we're looking at? Oh, now I forget what we're looking at. Poop, anybody remember what the strike price was? How does this work? You sell them now for 50 and you have to buy them back at 48, whatever price. No, no, no. That's shorting, rank. This is option. Option is you're paying a premium over the time frame to control a certain amount of shares. You're not buying the stocks or selling the stocks. You're buying the rights to be able to sell a stock at a certain price, or you're buying the rights to be able to sell a stock at a certain price. So what you risk is that. That's all it is. You're not risking any more than what you're putting in. If you're naked short-selling and stuff like this, you're risking huge. So that's the difference. That's the difference. That's the difference. Oh, because we're looking at Alcoa. We weren't looking at Intel. That's right. We're looking at Alcoa before for 55 cents it was up. So what would Alcoa be doing right now? Let's see that Alcoa do a movement. We weren't looking at Intel. We're looking at Alcoa. Alcoa is still the same. So that's the general gist of options trading. And one thing you can do is you can look for, you can bet that the stock is going to go up and down. So for example, if we go here, let's find a serious movement in the market. See how many things moved heavy. All right, let's see if anything's done a major move that might have options on it. Nothing's, see the thing is, nothing's moving really too much right now. Okay, nothing's because it's the last trading day. Let me do this. Let's bring up my video. And let's bring up chat. So do you think it's going to go up or down based on the charts for Intel? Oh, that's a serious question, right? It looks like it's bottoming. So it might do a move up, but it really depends on an announcement. From what I understand, sleepy ways, Intel was going to announce that they were going to, they're working on something new. So it really depends on what their news is. As far as the general market goes, what's Intel's PE? Intel's PE was pretty low, I believe, and it gave a dividend. Let's see. Let's take a look at that. Sorry if I'm not sharing the screen. It's not worth sharing it. The speaker goes out. Intel's PE is 10. It's got a yield of, where's the yield? Yield is 2.69, right? 2.7% yield. The PE is low and the yield is 2.7%, which isn't bad, relatively speaking. I mean Intel's competitor is NVIDIA. NVIDIA is killing it and has been killing it, right? NVIDIA's PE is 92. It's got a yield of 0.05. So as far as value investing goes, Intel has better value in terms of tech. Goals, people are choosing NVIDIA over Intel. Intel, I believe, lost Apple's contract, if I remember correctly, right? Sleepy Waves, damn, very good stock and is trading at less than a dollar now. I remember when we looked at it, was around three to four dollars. Yeah, very, yeah. And family had a position in very, but we, the family dumped it, did a couple of bumps on it, right? The supply chain's broken. It's the pressure on consumable goods and materials is done. Fascistic governments came in and locked society down. In my opinion, the family's opinion, they're intentionally breaking the economy because they want to reset it, right? Pumped the worth of trillions of dollars of fiat currency. A lot of big companies are doing buybacks. Like for example, Enrich came out, oil company came out recently and said they're doing a $1.6 billion stock buyback. Like holy shite, right? Holy shite. Why are they doing that? Because, well, they got free money, right? They got free money and they really don't see room investing in too much in R&D because they don't know what's happening with the markets and stuff like that. So they're propping up their stock price. Apple is doing the same thing, right? Apple is doing the same thing. And if the supply chains go back to normal, very would be a goodbye, right? Oh, my God. That was like old school Twitch streams. That was old school Twitch streams. Then pay Yuki. AMD is a more direct competitor of Intel. AMD is more direct. Let's take a look at AMD. What's AMD doing? AMD was down a lot. Advanced micro. What's AMD trading at? Oh, wow. AMD is 145. AMD PE 45. It doesn't have a yield. It doesn't even give you anything. And AMD has been killing it, right? Here, I'll share the screen with you. Here, let me kill this. Here's the chart for AMD. Let's take a look at this, right? Here's AMD. All right. PE of 45. No yield. It doesn't give you anything back, which means it's more of a growth stock than value investing, right? So they think they can make better use of their money. So this is the day chart for it. It's down whatever, 22 cents. Here's the one-year chart. Let's take a look at the one-year chart. Wow. Look at this. Now, would you be buying this thing right now? I wouldn't be buying it right now, right? It's sitting almost at the 50-day moving average, right? The 200-day moving average is in the low hundreds. And this thing is sitting at 144. Okay. Let's take a look at the two-year chart on this. And one thing you can take a look at is the gap between the 200-day moving average, which is down here, right? And the 50-day moving average, which is here. The bigger the gap, the more likely that the stock will be pulled down. Okay. And let's take a look at the five-year chart on this thing. Five-year chart on this thing. And wow, look at that, look at that. Look at that, look at that. So a 10-banger, if you bought it in 2018, right? And we're going to do 10-year chart. Let's do a 10-year chart. Let's get a feel for this thing. And it's a good idea to get a feel for this thing. Wow, look at this thing. In 2013, if you bought it, you could have bought it at $2.84, right? Or $2, let's say. You could have bought it at $2. Right now, it's sitting at $144. 72 times your money. Would you be buying this stock right now? I don't know. I don't know. Let's compare it to Intel. Please enter a valid symbol. This is in Bugger's INTC. Come on. It's not pulling it up, unfortunately. So I personally wouldn't be buying it. AMD. Even though some people say buy winners. Again, don't forget. Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. June Assange is a publisher and journal that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see wikileast.org, defend.wikileast.org or our June Assange and Wikileast playlist on censor 2. Sleepy by Chicho. When you say it's sitting on support, what do you mean? It's sitting on 50-day moving average, right? So basically, if you average out the buying price, how much people bought it for the last 50 days, it averages out to that value, right? So when a stock hits the 50-day moving average or support levels, that's what they're called, support levels. They tend to do a bounce. Now, is that bounce going to hit or is it going to cut through that support like butter? When it cuts through that support with like butter, the odds are there's going to be more pressure on it on the downside. And if it cuts through it, resistance. When it's on the upside, hitting it on the upside, it's called resistance, the same line, right? So if this is the 50-day moving average, the stock is coming up, it's hitting that. It's called resistance because average price over the last 50 days was that. And when people hit that average price, if they were sitting at a loss, they usually try, not usually, but they try to liquidate, right? They got their money back. Let's get out, right? And see what it does. So it comes down. If it's on the way down hitting it, it's called support and it does bounces, right? People buy more, okay? Free assange from extradition. Indeed, indeed. Mr. Hezekiah, how are you doing? Is that an enormous donkey tail behind you? That is. Look, it goes all the way down here. It's all the way down here. There's two strands. And these things you touch up, they fall, the leaves. And these things root and grow. I like this plant. I like this plant a lot. It's fantastic. Wow, that is awesome. Yeah. They are so delicate, so delicate, so delicate. Yeah. Hopefully we'll have it here for a long time. And it's got like multiple strands coming from it, right? You can take the seeds and throw them anywhere and they'll grow, right? Here, we'll throw one here. There you go. Let's see if you'll grow there. Pastries gang, here's the pastries. Mum's pastries went for Christmas last week. Saw a family, touched bays, and grabbed some Mum pastries. Fantastic. Super delicious. Super delicious. Look at this goodness. And this is chicho jam, right? Chicho jam. Sleepy way is common. Looking at winning stocks, it's amazing to see how much money people have made in stocks. No wonder all the YouTube gurus are constantly chasing up and coming stocks, indeed. And when you're in that type of a market, look out because there could be serious liquidity issues. And for example, right now, I think it's at a margin debt I believe is at an all-time high, which basically means that people are leveraged to the tee. They are so, they've gone in debt to be able to buy stocks, invest in stocks, right? So they could be serious if stocks drop, they're going to get margin calls. And what's going to end up happening is they're going to have to liquidate out of certain stocks to be able to pay their debts, their bets, right? And what that does, that basically puts more pressure on stocks on the downside, okay? And that in turn forces people to be liquidating when the price is dropping. And what you see happening is like major movements down. We could be in that type of a situation. We could be in that type of a situation. Come the new year. Cheryl, how are you doing? Good morning. Happy new year. Hi, all. Perfect topic for my day. Just finished a meeting at the bank. Not for bad reasons. Okay, good, good. Not for bad reasons is a good thing. Oh, my God. Many businesses in my area only take card payments now. Very sad times, very sad times, very sad times. That's ridiculous as far as I'm concerned. I won't shop in places that don't take cash. I use cash. They don't take cash. They don't have my business. End of story, okay? Too bad for them. I walk away. And they have to take cash. Cash is legal tender. Businesses, you can actually take legal action against them for not taking your cash if you want to go down that route. I personally don't. But they have to take cash. Can we look at one last talk? Sure, sleepywigs. What do you want to look at? What do you want to look at? What you guys got plans for the new year? You're going to party on the ground? You're going to party on the ground? Places that are locked down? Like just imagine Montreal, Canada. Right, go back. They came out and said yesterday they announced that they're putting everybody under curfew as of tonight. Starting at 10pm I believe. All the restaurants, bars, clubs, venues that sold tickets to people so they could come and party on New Year's Eve. They all just got burned. So the government just burned their citizens. Just burned them. Some of those people are going to go bankrupt because the government, the fascistic government, locked the place down. Unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable. Unbelievable. What are we going to do about it? What are they going to do about it? Match! Can we look at Beyond Meets or Match? I follow both of them. Beyond Meets is hitting a bottom. Match is, by the way, since you brought up Match, Match is the only stock that the family has calls on that is betting that it's going to go up. Beyond Meets family had calls on as well, but there was a little bump that happened and family sold out of that. But if you want those, let me bring them up. Let me set up the things. We'll take a look at Match and let's bring it up here as well. I hate websites that do, you don't want them to do refresh. They automatically do it. I don't know why they set it up like that. Match, match, okay. Let me change the view. Let me bring up the chat. Cheryl, there are a bunch of local places that have signs saying they are cashless or only take cars, but if you ask, they will take cash. Might be worth asking to spread the word that people wanted. Yeah, indeed. Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, okay. Cheryl, if you don't mind me asking about that. Yeah, when this whole thing happened, there were a few places that were not taking cash. One of them was local and I boycotted them for a year afterwards because I didn't want to spend my money there. So here's Match. It's up five cents today. Let's take a look at the charts for it. Let's take a look at the one-year chart for it. So it's sitting well below the 50-day moving average and 200-day moving average. There is a trend that's pointing on the downside, but if you draw a line from here to here to here, there could be possibly a downside to it, but it broke its down trajectory here. So you could draw a lot of lines to get a feel for what the stock is doing, right. So this is the one-year chart. Here's the two-year chart, okay. Here's the two-year chart. Based on the two-year chart, this could drop a lot more. This could drop a lot more. And here's a five-year chart. Here's the five-year chart. Based on the five-year chart, it could drop a lot more. Take a look at Match. In 2018-17, it was sitting at $16 right now, sitting at $133, right, $133. And let's take a look at the overview on this. It's sitting at a P of 67, okay. It's got a beta of 0.66. It beat that, I don't even know how to pronounce this. It beat that, this is basically accounting practices, you know, what they're announcing. It's 700 and eight, or let's say 800. That's really good. That's really good. Not bad, not bad, right. And you can go here, it won't go there. But you can also take a look at the options on it, right. So let's take a look at the options for, let's say, February. Here's the options for February for Match. So February 18th, right. It cost, it's sitting at $133, right. So it's between 130 and 135, okay. Oops, no, no, no, don't load, ah, poop. It's sitting between 130 and 135. Oh, where'd it go? Oh, we're gonna go back to February again. Let's go to February. So sitting between 130 and 135 at $133, right. Let's look at the straddle on this, right. So sleepy waves, let's make a note on this. Let's assume you're gonna assume that Match is gonna do big movement by February, a week and three months, right. You can buy a put, let's say at $920, that you have the right to sell match at $135, right. And you can buy a call for Match for $1055, that gives you the right to buy it at $130, right. So put these together, right, put these together. So one, let's say you're gonna straddle it, you're gonna bet that it's both gonna go up and down. So $1055 plus $920, $9.2. So it's gonna cost you $19, right, or $2,000, really, right. But let's assume it's gonna cost you $20, which is $2,000, right. So if you put $2,000 into this, right, it means you're buying a put, the right to sell it at $35, and a right to buy it at $30. You need this stock to go down, right. So if you're putting $20, you need to be at $115, right. Oh no, don't go, don't go, don't go, pooper, scooper, did it again, February. I gotta stop doing that. So are we in February or we're in February, okay, right. So we're here, right. So you need it to be at least, for the put, okay, or for the call, you need the stock to be at least trading at $115 for you to break even, right. So that's $20 above this, so take a look at this thing. At $135 right now, if you go $20 above this, it's at $155, right. At $155, it's trading at $23, $2350, let's say, right. So there's a $3 premium there relative to what it would be if it was expiring today, right. Relatively speaking, because it's $133, right. Or you need it to be above $150 here for you to break even on February 18th, right. Because if you go $20 less than this, you're at $110, you're sitting at $24, $25, right. So one way you can get a feel for how much the time value premium is on a certain option is take a look at the option of what it would cost, what it would give you, what you would lose if it was expiring today, and look at what it is whenever the time frame is that you're buying it. For us, we're looking at February 18th, okay. Is that clear? That's one way of looking at this. Cheryl, I know a few people that have left New York City in the last year. Yeah, Cheryl. Yeah, because sleepy waves is there, I believe, yeah. Lark Park, the cost of New York must be insanely ridiculous, and I'm from Cali, so I have a pretty good idea. Cali, some parts of Cali are crazy. New York and Cali are two different states. Yeah, even though, yeah, and both New York and Cali under fascistic dictators, right, that are destroying both New York and California's economy as far as I see it. And people are flooding out of California and New York right now. I don't think it's a good place to be to tell you the truth. I don't think it's a good place to be. Let's turn this back on. Okay, woke coast. Ha ha, woke coasts. Get out of there. Get out of there. Fun. This was a nice chill. Option trading, live stream. Good to do. Good to do. It's something that we promised that we would do, and I'm glad we're, you know, at least touching on it, and we'll delve into it a lot, a lot more in the future. But for now, I think it's worth just looking at these things and sort of exploring the possibilities. Exploring the possibilities. Let me check out the chart. East coasts and West coasts have been terribly gentrified. Yeah, yeah, in a bad way, in a bad way. Right? Chichu, do you have interest in blockchain projects? Something like Wonderland or DeFi? DeFi, I've looked at, a friend of mine has evolved in it, and she's having fun with it. Okay, she's having a lot of fun with it, and making money there as well. So there is huge potential there, by the way. There's huge potential there, indeed, indeed. Lots of potential. Lots of potential. First time chat, your resonance, hi, just arrived. What are you streaming about? We're taking a look at the options, stocks, trading. We looked at a few stocks, looked at some of the metrics, looked at puts and calls. Lovely plants, thank you very much. Thank you very much. We got this one as a gift. Take a look. It's got a big flower on it. We didn't have this plant before. Take a look at this one. Pretty. And that's the flower on it. Crazy, eh? Beautiful flower. I don't know how long the flower lasts, but we'll put it here so you can see it. It's, wow, interesting. Pretty, yeah, very pretty. Very pretty. Thick, thick. Cheryl, to give you an idea, Lark Park, to Lark Park, on four hours from New York, and know several families for whom it is considerably less expensive to own a very large home here, drive to New York, stay over in hotels for two nights, then it is to live there as a family. It works for them, but it's nuts. Wow. And hotels in New York are expensive. I've been to New York. Hotels were crazy expensive. See where she drove. Are you and family currently trying to buy any assets to compensate for the inflation? No, no, no. I think a lot of assets are in a bubble as well, right? No large purchases. Stay liquid. That's the key I think right now. Cheryl, ooh, rough typing on that one. What's this? I'm read okay. I left it apart where they work there. Oh, they work there. They go there to work. They drive four hours, stay in a hotel for two days to work and then come back. Whoa. My God. That's crazy. Your residence. Do you invest in options without owning the underlying asset? Indeed. And options trading is not investing. It's gambling. Let's make that clear. Options trading is gambling. End of story. Okay. I just subscribe. Thank you very much for subscribing. Your residence. Appreciate the support. And glad to have you here. We're towards the end of the stream, by the way. But thank you for joining us. And we do have a Discord page, by the way, your residence. You're welcome to join us there as well. Isn't investing also gambling? To a certain degree. I mean, investing in your health is not gambling. Investing in your health is legit investing. My SUV, Sleepy Waves, I gave to my mom. We got it fixed, right? And I did a tune up on it, got it on the road, and I'm giving it to my mom. Do you know why I'm giving it to my mom? Because her car was parked outside on the street and a telephone pole fell on it, right? The city neglected rotting telephone poles and the people, the owners of the land that were doing construction were negligent in maintaining the telephone poles. And during a windstorm, the telephone pole fell on the car and the car was right off while it was parked at night. The car is a right off, her car is a right off, and she needs a car. So I've given my car to my mom. It's actually sitting in a different city, I got to drive it to her. Which works out fine. Which works out fine. Investing in family is not gambling. Oh my god, so they commute, so they commute. It's more like three days there, four days, four here. But yes, as Cheryl, I was doing that between Victoria and Vancouver for three, four years. It was insane. It was four and a half hour commute because I had students still in Vancouver that I was teaching, that I promised I would see them to the end of the graduation. Your resonance, I don't really agree. Not if you use the options as a hedge. Yeah, as a hedge. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, otherwise I could agree. Yeah, agreed. If you have the underlying asset, and we talked about this earlier, by the way, your resonance, right? If you have the underlying asset and you don't want to sell for whatever reason, maybe tax purposes because you don't want to realize the gains, you can write calls or write puts if you think the stock is going to go up and pocket the difference. Or if it's going down, you can write the calls and pocket the value, the time value on it. Or if you're holding the underlying stock and you think there might be a hiccup in the price of the stock, you might buy puts to hedge against your bet that the stock is going to go up. And when the stock goes down, you make the difference. So you're hedging your bets 100%, right? 100%. And straddling is a beautiful thing to do when there's major movements, of course. CT makes much more sense to me, Connecticut, sleepy ways. But for these folks, they're a bit closer to family here and much less densely populated. Your resonance, you seem like a likable person. Thanks. Is it a goatee? By the way, I am in Sweden. Salutations, Sweden. We have some people that do frequent our live stream from Sweden. I actually sent a couple of packages to Sweden in the last couple of weeks. We had an auction, yearly auction, for Twitch Points, where we auctioned off some goodies, comic books, honey, applesauce that I made, drug war trading cards, drug war trading cards. I bought a whole bunch of these to auction off with Twitch Points. And there were a couple of people in Sweden that I sent the packages to expensive shipping to Sweden. Wow. From Canada, west coast of Canada. What is the most important of the Greeks, according to you? Who is the most important of the Greeks? I teach mathematics, so I would say Pythagorean, even though they were called. So Pythagorean theorem comes in handy. A lot. A lot. And I've done geophysics, so Pythagorean theorem I used all the time to make grids, square grids. And I sent the package to the US. We are balancing each other out nice. I'm in Canada, though, west coast of Canada. So is crazy. Sleepwear, chichot. This stream and your discord just shows me how much I need to stop using Robinhood. They even charge a premium for everything you buy. Yeah, Robinhood is garbage. Remember, when Robinhood was trading at $42, I said family had puts in it. Right now Robinhood is trading at $18 or something. No longer puts in Robinhood, but it's a garbage platform. I really would like to go to Canada. Canada is nice, man, but we've got fascistic government and power regarding options I meant. Resonance. What is the most important of the Greeks according to you? Regarding options, Greeks. Oh, the beta alpha and stuff. Beta is important for options, of course. Beta is crazy important. If I didn't catch it, went over my head. There is no Pythagorean theorem in options trading. That's why you come out so friendly and peaceful. It's not the goatee. It's not the goatee. Cool, cool, cool. Oh, Canada. Canada in 2022. Nice, nice. And gang, don't forget. Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. Julien Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see WikiLeaks.org, Defend.WikiLeaks.org, or Julien Assange, WikiLeaks playlist on SensorTube. Gang, should we call the stream? That's called the stream. That was fun. And your resonance, welcome to our Twitch channel. Hopefully you enjoyed the last few minutes of our live stream. It was very chill today. Happy new year, by the way. I hope you enjoy 2022 as does everyone else. No, no. Stay. We just, we're almost in two hours. I know we'll be back. I do, I was doing a lot of streams. I was doing, you know, a lot of streams before. I slowed down for the last couple of months. We had a lot of stuff, family stuff to take care of. But we will be doing a lot of streams, your resonance. Sleep away, Chicho. Will you have more streams looking at the markets like this? I loved it. Thank you. My pleasure, Steve Ways. And yes, we will be. Indeed, indeed. Cheryl, have a safe new year, celebrations, everyone. You as well, Cheryl. And everyone, of course. Thanks. Happy new year to you too. Thank you very much. Happy new year to everyone, yours. Awesome, awesome. It was fun closing out the year with you, Chicho. Thanks for the stream. My pleasure, gang. My pleasure. And gang, as a closing, if you want to know what this work is about, I am on Patreon. Patreon.com forward slash Chicho. If you want to support this work, if you want to follow this work, which is basically layered on mathematics, Patreon is a great way to do so. For those of you that are supporting this work on Patreon, gang, thank you very much for the support. Happy new year to you. I hope 2022 is an amazing year and a free year. And it is in large part because of your support that we're able to do what it is that we are doing as well as the support we're getting on Twitch. So if you want to participate in these live streams, as they're happening in the chat, Twitch is where you want to be at. And gang, thank you for being here. Thank you for the support and mods as always. Thank you for taking care of business. I'm just going to read some more of the chat, just lonely piggy. I'll be stuck with a curfew here in Quebec. So no, no lonely piggy. So fish is thick. What they just pulled the rug from underneath so many businesses, mom and pops shops. Unbelievable to me. Unforgivable, really. Sylvia Chichot, thank you for all the streams and work this year, Chichot. Appreciate it. My pleasure. My pleasure. What about the road? The Greeks are all important. The Greeks are all important. Alliga Chichonia in 2022 will be amazing. I hope it. Man, the brother. Do you think that is important? It could be. Do you think, where are we? Last chat. Do you know about Haps multi-stream platform? No, I don't know about Haps. H-A-P-P-S. It's like OBS, but it streams multiple platforms. Right now I'm only streaming on Twitch. I just decided to only stream on Twitch, not on other platforms and definitely not streaming on sensor 2. And gang, we do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on mines, vkgap, parlor, getter, bitcloud and the vk. You can follow the work there. And again, we do have a discord page. You can come to our chat anytime you want and type in discord and you'll get the little invite there and the links will be in the description of this video. We have probably around a thousand people sharing information there, talking, just lurking and reading. And it's a great place to be. I spend a lot of time there, share a lot of information and acquire a lot of knowledge there. We will be uploading the audio of this live stream to soundcloud.com or slash chicho as a podcast. And this podcast will be available in your favorite podcasting platform, Koenig Spotify, iTunes and Google Play. And we will be uploading this live stream to sensor 2, to bitchu, to rumble and to Odyssey. And all the links for all these platforms will be available in the description of this video after it's been uploaded and the audio on soundcloud as well. And it's available on our Twitch page as well. You can scroll down and you'll see all these links. Aside from that gang, interesting 2021, I hope you have a fantastic, fantastic 2022. I talked to a guy, he said that Ro is the most important, but most people say Vega, the volatility is crazy important. That's the ones that are very volatile are the ones that are amazing to straddle, right? Such as Moderna. But on the Dalaside is better, the puts. Gang, salutations, see you in 2022. Bye, everyone.