<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: Excellent insights for the seasoned options trader Review: An option book that provides both - theory & practical insights into option trading and making two sided markets. It is also a great help in understanding and organizing risk while trading options as a professional. A great book for new and seasoned traders as well as risk managers.
Rating:  Summary: Options Innovator Review: I read Options: Perception and Deception at least 3-4 times before many of the advanced concepts began to sink in. This is not a book for an options novice; in fact, I would suggest that most people read Natenberg's book on options prior to engaging in this incredible text. While many of the advanced 3-D graphs were beyond my grasp, I particularly liked Cottle's description of "real world" options positions, how he executed them and how he managed them throughout their duration. Of particular interest to many readers should be the concept of "gamma scalping", and the section on wingspreads and adjusting positions. This text is so far beyond "mainstream" options books, that words do not describe how important this book will become.
Rating:  Summary: Options Innovator Review: I read Options: Perception and Deception at least 3-4 times before many of the advanced concepts began to sink in. This is not a book for an options novice; in fact, I would suggest that most people read Natenberg's book on options prior to engaging in this incredible text. While many of the advanced 3-D graphs were beyond my grasp, I particularly liked Cottle's description of "real world" options positions, how he executed them and how he managed them throughout their duration. Of particular interest to many readers should be the concept of "gamma scalping", and the section on wingspreads and adjusting positions. This text is so far beyond "mainstream" options books, that words do not describe how important this book will become.
Rating:  Summary: Updated Review by the Author Review: Reviewer: The author, Charles M. Cottle *** charles@RiskDoctor.com Although this original text was written for professional market makers, it proved to be a valuable resource for sophisticated retail investors and hedgers. I therefore created a new book, "Coulda Woulda Shoulda" (available for free download at www.riskdoctor.com) which borrowed about 80% of the original text and added more tools for non-professionals including an email dialogue with a relative novice, spanning 2 months. Most of the strict market making tools have been removed but will be resurrected in book 3; "Taming Your Portfolio" due out later this year.
Rating:  Summary: Updated Review by the Author Review: Reviewer: The author, Charles M. Cottle *** charles@RiskDoctor.com Although this original text was written for professional market makers, it proved to be a valuable resource for sophisticated retail investors and hedgers. I therefore created a new book, "Coulda Woulda Shoulda" (available for free download at www.riskdoctor.com) which borrowed about 80% of the original text and added more tools for non-professionals including an email dialogue with a relative novice, spanning 2 months. Most of the strict market making tools have been removed but will be resurrected in book 3; "Taming Your Portfolio" due out later this year.
Rating:  Summary: Best book for options traders. Review: There are basically two types of options books: mathematical books on valuation that tend to be filled with solutions for ever more exotic contracts, and books for traders that go over the practical workings of positions in various concrete scenarios. Cottle is definitely of the second type. There's not really much math in it, unless you're intimidated by three-dimensional graphs. What it does have is an incredible wealth of insight, from experience, into the tricks and theexceptions--the rent-a-call, the dividend plays, contract risk and post-expo deltas, complicated synthetics, the interrelations between greeks. That said, what moved me to write a review was to take exception with a previous reviewer's comment: "No lazy editing or prose here". The prose is okay, but the editing is worse than lazy--it's horrendous. Flipping my copy open at random I come to p.151-152 on Break-Even analysis. Try finding column 7 in exhibit 4-23, or the supposed arrow in column 4. It's all a mess. That's an extreme case, but throughout the text, it's hard enough trying to pick up the bond options lingo (futures in 32nds but futures-options in 64ths--all "ticks"; and the different multipliers for indexes and futures), without having to deal with missing words, inaccurate references, etc, etc. But ultimately, working to figure it all out gets you to understand it all the better. With five years of floor trading as an equity options market maker, and having read and reread and rereread... Natenberg, Baird, Hull, Connolly, Cox Ross Rubinstein, Chriss, Taleb--and others--I'd say Cottle is clearly the best book. That said, however, I don't know how much use a non-professional--someone who doesn't manage a large, actively traded book of options-- will get out of it. It should be intellectually rewarding if you can figure it out. Maybe inspire you to go look for a minimum wage clerking job in Chicago, NY, Philly, or SF to get abused for a year or so and then maybe get a badge.
<< 1 >>
|