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Options Education Series

Typical
Option
Strategy

A structured guide to understanding and applying core options strategies in modern markets

8 Modules Beginner to Intermediate Practical Examples
01
Foundation

What Is an Option?

An option is a financial contract giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset at a specified price before a given expiry date.

Call Option
Right to Buy
Profits when the underlying asset rises above the strike price. Buyer pays a premium for this right.
Put Option
Right to Sell
Profits when the underlying asset falls below the strike price. Acts as portfolio insurance.
02
Terminology
03
Overview
Bullish
Profit from upward price movement. Suited for optimistic market outlooks with defined or unlimited upside.
Bearish
Profit from downward price movement. Used to hedge existing positions or speculate on declines.
Neutral
Profit when the underlying stays within a price range. Ideal for low-volatility, sideways markets.
Volatility
Profit from large price swings in either direction. Direction-neutral but volatility-sensitive.
04
When You Expect a Rise

Bullish Strategies

05
When You Expect a Decline

Bearish Strategies

06
Range-Bound & Event-Driven

Neutral & Volatility
Strategies

07
Your Path Forward
01
Build the Foundation
Master calls, puts, Greeks, and pricing models. Study payoff diagrams until they're intuitive.
02
Paper Trade
Simulate strategies on a demo account. Track your reasoning and outcomes without real capital at risk.
03
Small Positions
Deploy real capital in limited size. Focus on defined-risk strategies like spreads to control losses.
04
Scale & Refine
Grow position sizing as your edge is proven. Add advanced strategies gradually as experience accumulates.
The market rewards patience and preparation — understand the tool before you trade the tool.
08