Business idea

I have $35k in cash right now. I want to start a business. This business must have the potential to generate some passive revenue.

No crypto, gold/silver please, already have some...

I'm listening to you biz elite.

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U can buy a wide format printer and laminator for 20k or $500 a month then go to some trade shows and speak to creative directors about printing graphics for them. Hire a designer/ printer and a good sales guy. It's not exactly passive but after a few months u can net at least 3-4k a week with minimal work. Unless u fuck up your orders. This is a one chance kind of industry ...

If it’s so easy why isn’t everyone doing it

>This business must have the potential to generate some passive revenue.
sell options.
I like it because it's kinda passive a couple clicks a few times a month.
will you get more money later or is 35K the only amount you'll invest?

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could put more if the ROI is real...

yes i think i'm gonna

Passive income businesses are a meme and almost never work out. You're gonna have to wage slave one way or another

Why do you think about a car mobile food ?

COOM. AAAAARHRHRGGRGRGRGRGGRBBBHHHHHHH

Learn to trade options form ex floor traders
youtube.com/user/tastytrade1/videos
I would start by selling a put on cheap stock you would own anyway.
you can start to learn with 5k
interactive brokers is what I use, watch out for fees some brokers charge $20 for an options trade which is horrible and prevents doing small trades to learn.
You interested in any markets? gold/silver etc? cos it's easier to do in market you monitor.

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Underage virgins. Get off my board.

Ugly tits, fuck off. Go suck 1000 dicks for $1 each and invest it all in RSR and MITX

Selling puts is possibly the worst choice for someone who has no experience in options.

She's perfect aside from those giant pepperoni nipples

Kys fuckong subhuman room temperature iq

not a fan of puffies?

>Selling puts is possibly the worst choice for someone who has no experience in options.
really a max loss of $100 is the worst choice?

what do you recommend selling a call spread when the skew favors selling calls with richer implied volatility?

I'd love to hear what is working for you, selling a put is what tasty trade recommends people beginning do with its like buying a stock at a discount.

I wouldn't recommend SELLING any options. Buy yes, sell no.

Since he's first starting out, he wouldn't have an options level to sell naked, so it he wanted to sell a put it would be a cash covered put. That means that he would have to lock up his cash for the duration of the option.

If he goes for a longer expiration, he'd make more premium, but the money would be locked up longer. If he goes for a shorter term, his money is unlocked quicker, but he's also not making premium.

Since we probably have to assume he's selling the put with a strike below the current price, that means the premium isn't going to be that great. And if it WAS, that would be a warning that the stock has crazy volatility; which means he wouldn't want to own the underlying anyway.

But most of all, he wouldn't want to sell either calls or puts because selling a call has unlimited risk, and selling a put has nearly an unlimited risk.

You said "low priced" stock, so let's say it's selling for $10. He sells a call for 8, and makes probably $12 total in premium. If it stays above 8, he's made his $12, but if it falls to 7, he's now in queer street. If (as sometimes happens), the company gets hit by a bolt of lightening the day after he sells and it goes down to 2, he's really screwed.

Instead, as a new options trader he should focus on buying options only. Or, at the very most, a covered call. Something that will let him wet his feet without risking everything while he's still too new to know what he is doing.

The biggest advantage to buying (instead of selling), is that you have rights but no obligation. If you sell options, you have obligations and very few rights.

If, as you said, the goal is to buy a stock at a discount, then do a covered call with the strike price as high or higher than you would have sold it anyway.

So if you planned on buying at 10 and selling at 13, then buy the stock at 10 but sell a covered call at 13.

If the stock reaches 13, you've sold it as you planned, plus you got the premium on the option. But if it doesn't reach 13, you still have the stock, but also still have the premium.

I've had some stocks where I've sold covered calls on the same shares 4 or 5 times before it finally sold.

That being said.. covered calls aren't for everyone, especially if you're talking about a stock that drops in price more than the premium you've collected. If that happens, you just have to sit on the loss.

> Paragraph 6 should have said "he sells a PUT with an 8 strike"

>a new options trader he should focus on buying options only.
90% of options expire worthless
the arbitrage between actual volatility and implied volatility costs him money statistically.
>
Or, at the very most, a covered call.
A covered call he has to buy the underlying so added fees
and it locks up the money anyway.

Sell a put when the price goes down the IV spikes when IV comes back down buy it back.
If you get assigned the stock sell a covered call.
the stock I recommend sells for like $1.75 and used to have 0 debt. The suggestion was to sell the $1 strike locking up the massive amount of $100. I've blown more than that drinking in a night!
>I've had some stocks where I've sold covered calls on the same shares 4 or 5 times before it finally sold.
I've done the same thing with puts, sell a put then buying it back over and over at different expiration dates.

What expiration do you sell at out. I buy LEAPS and sell 45 to 360 days out?
What underlyings do you follow?
For me its SPY, GLD, SLV, GDX no default risk and they are liquid and volatile enough to trade around my positions.

To get back on topic do you recommend this user trade options for income? He wanted low effort income.

Also what platform do you use, mine interactive brokers.

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>I have $35k in cash right now.
When my stock moons I'm hoping to have around this amount of money in about 6 months.

Kind of in the same boat. Thinking about starting a bookkeeping business, but it seems easier to make money in the stock market right now.

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interesting...Checking it.

If you like the stock market you might like options.
300% in 30 days with a zero cost basis by trading around the initial position.

shill your stock user, what is the ticker symbol?

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>asking Jow Forums for advice
Just burn the money instead.

Just etsy. I think the stock is going to $110.
I'm about 2k on an 18k investment right now.

Film porn. Rent a camera and give an amateur porn wannabe $500. Put it on clips4sale and a 10 minute clip on pornhub. The ad revenue is a lot better than YouTube. The videos with millions of views make $10k or more

>I'm about 2k
2K up I mean.

>etsy.
If you believe in etsy that much you want to do this call purchase:
Buy a 70 strike call that expires in Jan 2021
cost around $10
$1,000 is the cost.
You'll have 480 days before the option goes to zero.
If etsy keeps going up the price of the option goes up.

If esty is at $110 in Jan 2021, the option will allow you to buy the stock at $70 and therefore be worth $40. So $1,000 -> $4,000
$3,000 profit

It could be worth considering to learn. You made the $2k already so you'd be risking $1,000 of house money.

If you just held the Etsy stock $1000/$60 = 16 stock
$110 - $60 = $50
16 x $50 = $800
So options gives almost 4x the profit.

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Sorry wrong image

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Develop a product and sell through e-commerce with a souped up website and clean marketing videos pushed on Facebook ads. Make the marketing videos from YouTube sponsored video influencer content.

Product ideas-
Radiation blocking underwear that are cheap, and comfy, and made with zero plastic 'polyester'.

There's a shit ton of the kind of physical product needs that are underserved, a slice of the pie is up for the taking for anyone smarter than the average goy

>hire 3 guys with 35k in start capital in start of venture
Just kys

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Because investment is scary

A part time designer / printer and a salesman working off commission. That's not gonna take a big chunk of your investment. Your probably too stupid to figure it out anyway. Forget I said anything. Stay poor faggot.

Thanks for the advice, but I can't with Vanguard.
Pic related.
They say I don't make enough money for margin/full options trading.

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it's already been proven that net buyers of options lose money in the long run

>dude nazis omg they're so edgy and cool like me xD

>They say I don't make enough money for margin/full options trading.
Maybe a good reason to switch to interactive brokers?
I can understand no margin, but not buying options must be some company regulation. You might want to double check, all you want to do is buy a call.

Food for thought anyway, you might be able to do some options trading in the future. I hope etsy hits your 110 target in any case.

buy holo