April 3rd, 2010, 12:04 am
Dear Wilmott Forum,Thanks for all the replies. In all honesty, I was just thinking about option trading as a hobby to learn more about mathematics and how to use Mathematica for a pet project. I have a respectable working knowledge of financial accounting and valuation theory and have done full blown fundamental security analysis on many companies and feel very confident trying to generate alpha on long or short side of equity investments, while minimizing tracking error / active risk. I guess my question sounded really sleezy as if I wanted to "get rich quick" doing options. Rather, I am more of the corporate finance type (i.e. modeling LBOs, M&A, IPOs, VC early stage companies, etc). I would never consider trading options as a full time profession as it is way to mathematical for my background. However, I have always had a very strong respect for quant finance (EE, CS, Math, Physics, Statistics, Financial Engineering) as just for the purposes of knowing a little bit outside my area of expertise I wanted to try to learn more about option trading and mathematical strategies. But it would only be as an intellectual exercise and for fun. Not to become a full blown stab arb trader. I leave that to the professionals trained in natural sciences.Anyways, I feel comfortable with the replies and have learned a lot about option trading. I will read the Hull book and spend money on Mathematica training to see if somehow I can leverage the sophistication of math and software to make better investment decisions (even if it is in plain vanilla debt or equity rather than exotic options and derivatives).Thanks,Shayan