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Options Trading System

Options-Trading-Systemâ„¢ is an affiliate of QQQ-Options-Serviceâ„¢, a service that delivers trading signals for QQQ options.

For beginners and advanced options traders alike, our QQQ options signals are very easy to follow (click here for an example). A signal can take one of two forms: "Buy Put" (to purchase a put option or "put") or "Buy Call" (to buy a call option or "call").

Concurrent with the issue of a trading signal, the system provides several options parameters that are necessary for making trading decisions and placing actual trades.

If you have decided to follow a signal, our "Suggested Entry Price" and "Suggested Exit Price" become the most important parameters associated with opening and closing a trade.

The fact that a new options trading signal has been issued does not necessarily imply that a trade will always take place. There are situations where the market does not reach our "Suggested Entry Price". When this happens, the trading signal will usually "expire" within a few trading days. For instance, assume a new trading signal was issued (published) on a particular day. If, following that date, no trade is initiated within three trading days, the signal will expire and we will cancel it. The reason we at times cancel a signal is to protect you against losses - options are decaying (wasting) assets and lose a portion of their value each day.

The following lists all the possible options signal adjustments that can occur following a signal issue or a trade initiation:

  1. A signal was issued, but no trade has yet been initiated:
    • The signal may expire;
    • We may cancel the old signal (the signal that was just issued);
    • We may issue a new signal;
    • A trade may be initiated in accordance with our "Suggested Entry Price".
  2. A trade was initiated in accordance with a previously issued signal:
    • We may adjust our "Suggested Exit Price";
    • We may close the trade in accordance with our "Suggested Exit Price".

Although we also incorporate other forms of market analysis into our decision making process, the basic principle behind the generation of our trading signals is a process called "volume technical analysis". To better understand how signals are generated, we have illustrated all the trades in our trade history with charts. These indicate the exact points at which signals were generated. The charts also reveal where trades were initiated and terminated. All of our chart examples are supported by brief explanations that show why a particular options signal was generated.

  • Trade History: A complete trade history of QQQ options trades based on our trading signals;
  • Trade Examples: Examples of all QQQ options trades from our trade history. The examples are based on NASDAQ-100 index charts. Each trade is annotated with a brief explanation.


RISK STATEMENT: The trading of stocks, futures, commodities, index futures or any other securities has potential rewards, and it also has potential risks involved. Trading may not be suitable for all users of this Website. Analyst research available through this Website does not constitute a recommendation or a solicitation any particular investor should purchase or sell any particular securities. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You absolutely must make your own decisions before acting on any information obtained from this Website. More...