Curiousat3am Categories Finance
What do you think/use as the most robust leading indicator if following technical analysis ? Please answer with reason , I will provide my answer after 2 hours
— Subhadip Nandy (@SubhadipNandy16) August 12, 2019
( At Delhi airport , bored as hell )
This thread actually had some great answers , one can learn a lot about the thought processes of different traders from the answers. Please go thru them
In a high IV environment or when the market is very volatile
— Subhadip Nandy (@SubhadipNandy16) January 21, 2022
" OTM options will behave like ATM options", one will get almost the same delta movement
Say we have two options, one 50 delta ATM options and another 30 delta OTM option. Normally for a 100 point move, the ATM option will move 50 points and the OTM option will move 30 points. But in a high volatile environment, the OTM option will also move nearly 50 points
To understand why this happens, first understand why an ATM option is 50 delta. An ATM option has the probability of 50% of expiring as ITM. The price just has to close a rupee above the strike for the CE to be ITM and vice versa for PEs
Now think of a highly volatile day like today. If someone is asked where the BNF will close for the day or expiry, no one can answer. BNF can close freakin anywhere, That makes every option of an equal probability of being ITM. So all options have a 50% probability of being ITM
Hence, when a huge volatile move starts, all OTM options behave like ATM options. This phenomenon was first observed in the Black Monday crash of 1987 at Wall Street, which also gave rise to the volatility skew/smirk
I wanted to know the best resources to learn about cryptocurrencies and blockchain for someone with zero knowledge. I asked Twitter, and Twitter answered.
This thread is a compilation of the best resources I was recommended. 👇👇
Let's start with ** BOOKS **
The first thing you should do before you pick up any book:
Learn about Bitcoin & Ethereum by reading the respective whitepapers.
- [Bitcoin white paper](https://t.co/cErOaFn6QL) by Satoshi Nakamoto
- [Ethereum White paper] (https://t.co/0g5kYCGJGq) by Vitalik Buterin
Even if you are not tech savvy, you can get a good grasp about how blockchain functions from these papers.
1) *The Basics of Bitcoins and Blockchains: An Introduction to Cryptocurrencies and the Technology that Powers Them* by Antony Lewis
This book covers topics such as the history of Bitcoin, the Bitcoin blockchain, and Bitcoin buying, selling, and mining.
It also answers how payments are made and how transactions are kept secure.
Other cryptocurrencies and cryptocurrency pricing are examined, answering how one puts a value on cryptocurrencies and digital tokens.
Block and bulk deals are large purchases of stocks by investment banks, mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds, FIIs, and promoters. Tracking block and bulk deals can help give you a sense of what these large players are thinking.
A single transaction where shares more than Rs 10 crores or the number of shares traded are more than 5 lakh is considered a block deal.
Block deals are carried out in separate trading windows. This trading window operates in two shifts of 15 minutes each:
Morning trading window from 8:45 AM to 9:00 AM.
Afternoon trading window from 2:05 PM to 2:20 PM
Block deals happen in different windows to reduce volatility and sudden price movements. Given that they are traded in a separate window, they do not show up on the volume charts.
Brokers facilitating the transaction are required to inform the exchange. You can track bulk and block deals on NSE & BSE:
https://t.co/pwTyzWTnUL
https://t.co/g9BbHiEag3

• 8 powerful ways to use Twitter
• Power of Stocks
• 14 Trading Strategies
• Basics of Derivatives (3 parts)
• Technical Analysis for all sectors
• Tweets of the week
• Books on Futures
All the Top 10 tweets threads I have ever posted to date:
Every week, I post a thread with the top ten tweets.
— Aditya Todmal (@AdityaTodmal) January 7, 2022
People seem to enjoy these a lot.
\U0001f9f5 Here's a list of all of them in order of appearance: \U0001f9f5
Basics of Derivatives Part 1:
\U0001d401\U0001d41a\U0001d42c\U0001d422\U0001d41c\U0001d42c \U0001d428\U0001d41f \U0001d403\U0001d41e\U0001d42b\U0001d422\U0001d42f\U0001d41a\U0001d42d\U0001d422\U0001d42f\U0001d41e\U0001d42c
— Nikita Poojary (@niki_poojary) January 8, 2022
\u2022 What is a derivative
\u2022 Various derivative products
\u2022 Participants in derivatives market
\u2022 Uses of derivative instruments
\u2022 Beta & hedge ratio
\u2022 Option Greeks
Time for a Thread \U0001f9f5
Curated in collaboration with @AdityaTodmal pic.twitter.com/x6IHoQubOT
8 powerful ways to use Twitter:
Most of the Trading community doesn\u2019t know how to use Twitter effectively.
— Aditya Todmal (@AdityaTodmal) January 15, 2022
Here are 8 powerful ways to use Twitter: \U0001f9f5
Collaborated with @niki_poojary pic.twitter.com/TuZt72PIzd
Basics of Derivatives Part 2:
\U0001d401\U0001d41a\U0001d42c\U0001d422\U0001d41c\U0001d42c \U0001d428\U0001d41f \U0001d403\U0001d41e\U0001d42b\U0001d422\U0001d42f\U0001d41a\U0001d42d\U0001d422\U0001d42f\U0001d41e\U0001d42c - \U0001d40f\U0001d41a\U0001d42b\U0001d42d \U0001d408\U0001d408
— Nikita Poojary (@niki_poojary) January 15, 2022
\u2022 How options can be used
\u2022 How to trade in options & exit strategy- buyers
\u2022 Imp of theta decay
\u2022 How to trade in options & exit strategy -sellers
Time for a Thread\U0001f9f5
Curated in collaboration with@AdityaTodmal pic.twitter.com/Ebd99afDKB
For a naked option to make money, it's better if IV rises or at least stays flat.
Rule 3 : DO NOT run or trade everything that moves. Focus on a few stocks and master them. When a move comes, make the max out of that move.
— Subhadip Nandy (@SubhadipNandy16) October 14, 2021
Example : in this crazy mkt, I did not even trade TataMotors this week. Stayed focussed on ITC and it gave good returns https://t.co/41wkugZg1I
This is a thread I wrote on IV, IVR etc
IV - A thread
— Subhadip Nandy (@SubhadipNandy16) September 20, 2018
In financial mathematics, implied volatility of an option contract is
that value of the volatility of the underlying instrument which, when
input in an option pricing model ) will return a theoretical value equal to the current market price of the option (1/n)