Hi, I'm Josh, ex-Wall Street Trader
Helping Investors make money trading options

Quoted In:
Stocks are checkers. Options are chess.
Most investors know options exist. But used wrong, they turn into expensive mistakes fast.
Here are the three traps I see kill results:
"Set It and Forget It"
Options aren't stocks you can just buy, hold, and ignore. Every contract is tied to a ticking clock. If you treat them like stock without a defined investment thesis and active management, time decay will quietly eat your capital alive.
Blindly Chasing Yield
The industry sells options as "easy income," but blindly selling premium is a fast track to underperforming the index. The biggest losses of my career came from selling options the wrong way.
"Trial-and-Error"
Using options to swing for the fences instead of strategically enhancing your portfolio is a recipe for disaster. Learning to trade options through trial and error — without an experienced guide — always ends the same way.
"Options Are the Most Powerful Tool in the Market"

If you're not using options, you're leaving money on the table. The smartest investors use options to protect, grow, and profit in any market. I've spent the last 22 years trading them myself — and helping everyone from Wall Street firms and billionaire real estate investors to first-time traders learn how to use them.
FROM THE INBOX:
I've been struggling a bit with the market lately but this trade sure helped!
Good service and has more successful trades than not.
My favorite trade recommendations come from your site.
I am a fairly modest trader so I got out of the trade with around 30% gains.
We followed your advice exactly and are happy to report 65% gains.
Investing in your technology was one of the wisest decision I ever made.Keep up the good work.
After more than 6 years of trading… my biggest winners ever!
Service yields consistent and profitable outcomes. It one of the most beneficial educational tools I have purchased.
See what I'm trading.
Free Trading Journal
How trading the markets looks from an ex-Wall Street trader -- the good and the ugly.
