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L A I S S E Z F A I R E T O D A Y S P E C I A L R E P O R T

TTTHHHEEE FETCH G E T P A I D I N A D V A N C E T O T R A D E S T O C K S W I T H W A L L S T R E E T ' S B E S T - K E P T S E C R E T T H E F E T C H T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

I N T R O D U C T I O N

P a g e 0 1 T H E S E T U P

P a g e 0 2 C O N T R O L

P a g e 0 4 T H E G A M B I T

P a g e 0 7 T H E F E T C H

P a g e 1 3 T H E A C E C A R D

P a g e 1 4 C O L L E C T & R E P E A T

P a g e 1 5 S U M M A R Y L E G A L E S E :

T H I S D O C U M E N T I S F O R E D U C A T I O N A L P U R P O S E S O N L Y A N D D O E S N O T C O N S T I T U T E F I N A N C I A L O R I N V E S T M E N T A D V I C E .

U S E T H I S ( P R E T T Y A W E S O M E ) S T R A T E G Y A T Y O U R O W N R I S K .

P L E A S E I N V E S T R E S P O N S I B L Y . I N T R O D U C T I O N T H E F E T C H

Wall Street doesn't care about you.

And its fattest cats laugh in your face each time they get bailed out on your dime.

We want to help you finally turn the tables on the Bronze Bull. In this report is just one small way you can start gaining an edge.

We call it “The Fetch.”

In , it’s a simple (and relatively low-risk) way to earn consistent income from the markets (no matter which way they’re headed) by getting paid FIRST, just for buying .

If you don't like to gamble away your money, it's probably the only strategy you'll ever need to learn.

In this short report, you're going to get a good primer on how to get started... and how to make your (free) first trade.

I N T R O D U C T I O N T H E F E T C H

BENEFITS OF THE FETCH

1] You can make money if the stock goes up, down, or sideways

2] Limited loss potential

3] Pretty simple to learn and understand

This short report is designed to introduce the concept, not to be all-encompassing.

[If you want a deeper dive, we've provided FREE resources on PAGE 14.]

I N T R O D U C T I O N T H E S E T U P T H E F E T C H

First thing.

You need to have a tiny amount of knowledge on options.

If you hate regular options trading, good.

Most people suck at it. And most people who do it are suckers.

That's not how we're going to trade.

The Fetch is about catching the inevitable money lost in the options casino.

But, you have to learn the rules before you can use them to your advantage.

If you don’t know anything about options, don’t worry.

We'll make it simple and leave the jargon for the corner offices.

Onward!

P A G E 1 C O N T R O L T H E F E T C H

Here’s what you need to know.

If you’re buying a put, it means you’re bearish, or you think the stock will go down.

If you’re buying a call, it’s a bullish move. You think the stock will go up.

(See? It's not so bad.)

Of course, the market doesn’t always agree with you.

And the market always, always, always wins.

You can lose a lot of money trading options. (If you don't believe me, go check out r/WallStreetBets).

Worse, even if the market trades sideways... options still lose money!

This is where YOU come in.

Keep this important detail in mind...

P A G E 2 T H E F E T C H

All options have an date.

Simply put (no pun intended), an gets eaten away by "time decay" as it gets closer to its expiration.

This means most options expire worthless... especially in a sideways market.

But this money doesn't just disappear into the ether. Someone gets the money!

And it might as well be you.

Meaning...

You can make a boatload of income every single day... by making measured trades and collecting money from people who, frankly, shouldn't be trading options.

Keep reading.

P A G E 3 T H E G A M B I T T H E F E T C H

Quick recap:

When buying a , you need the stock to move higher (and fast) because, remember, time decay is working against you.

If it goes down, you lose even more. If you go down past a certain level (more soon), your trade is screwed.

When buying a , on the other hand, you need the stock to move lower fast. If the price on your put stays the same, time decay eats your money.

If it goes up on a put? You've got even more problems.

But what happens to the sellers? Every market has winners and losers... just as it has buyers and sellers.

If the buyers are losing money, couldn't you just put yourself on the other side of that trade? YES!

P A G E 4 T H E F E T C H

So, let's say you want to sell a put.

(Which, again, in selling a put, you think the stock is going up... the reverse of buying.)

Now, get this...

There are three ways to make money when selling a put.

1] When the stock goes sideways

2] When the stock goes up.

3] AND, once you sell this put on the market, you get an instant to your account.

If the stock flatlines, you're collecting money the buyer is losing from time decay.

If the stock goes up, you make money.

(The opposite is true with selling calls, where you make money on the way down and sideways.)

P A G E 5 T H E F E T C H

I know what you're probably thinking...

Selling a call or a put in the market is risky. You can lose more than what you put in.

You're 100% correct, so as you just invest like most options traders. (Which is D.U.M.B.!)

But there's another way...

A strategy which covers your butt from a huge loss if the trade turns pear-shaped.

Known as...

P A G E 6 T H E F E T C H T H E F E T C H

We call it "The Fetch."

It's also often called a "" because you'll get paid by placing the trade...

WHILE limiting your downside...

And gaining an "unfair advantage" over other options traders.

When setting up a credit spread, you can buy and sell any combination of calls and/or puts with different strike prices and expiration dates.

Two things you need to know:

1] The "" is the fixed price at which the owner of an option can buy or sell. (You'll see what I mean in a moment.)

2] Each options contract covers 100 shares of the underlying stock.

P A G E 7 T H E F E T C H

Let's say you're wildly bullish on a stock.

In this situation, most options traders will either...

1] Buy a call

2] Sell a put

But there's something else you can do... it's called a "bullish put credit spread."

It sounds complex, but I'm going to make this very simple.

The "bull put spread" is when you sell a put and buy another put at a lower strike price.

Two things:

1] Both options contracts must be in the same expiration cycle. (Expire at the same time.)

2] Each trade should have the same number of contracts.

P A G E 8 T H E F E T C H

Guidelines (we'll go over this again further down):

Max Profit: Net Credit Received x 100

Max Loss: "Spread Width" (see below) of Put Strikes - Credit Received X 100

Expiration Breakeven: Short Put Strike - Credit Received

EXAMPLE: Let's say the stock price is $100.

You're buying two contracts (A and B).

You're going to SELL CONTRACT A, while you BUY CONTRACT B.

CONTRACT A (SELL): Strike Price: 100 Put Price: $5.00

CONTRACT B (BUY): Strike Price: 95 Put Price: $3.00

P A G E 9 T H E F E T C H

SELL STRIKE PRICE (A): $100 BUY STRIKE PRICE (B): $95 PREMIUM COLLECTED (A): $5.00 ($500) PREMIUM PAID (B): $3.00 ($300)

In this scenario, you're selling the $100 put for $5.00 (x100 = $500) and buying the $95 put for $3.00 (x100 = $300).

This means you collect $2.00 ($5 - $3 = $2). Remember, this is x100. Meaning, you get $200 added to your account INSTANTLY.

The "SPREAD WIDTH" is the difference between the BUY and SELL strike price, which is $5. ($100 - $95 = $5)

Based on a credit of $2 on a $5 width spread, here's what you're looking at:

Max Profit Potential: $2.00 credit X 100 = $200

Max Loss Potential: Width of spread ($5) - credit received ($2) x 100 = $200

P A G E 1 0 T H E F E T C H

Expiration Breakeven Price: $100 sell (A) - $2.00 credit = $98

Because the break-even price ($98) is less than the stock price ($100), the stock can fall a little and still profit.

Meaning, this spread has a profit probability greater than 50%. (66.67%, to be exact, but more on how to calculate that in a moment.)

Remember, a "bull put credit spread" means you're bullish. (A "bear call credit spread" is reversed. See our Summary chapter at end.)

If it expires above $100, you keep the $200.

If it expires between $100 and $98, you still make money.

If it expires between $95 and $98, you lose money, but not the max. loss.

If it expires below $95, you realize the maximum loss of $200.

P A G E 1 1 T H E F E T C H

Here's a way to make it even simpler...

Our friends over at IncomeTrader.com have a useful "Credit Spread Calculator." (Click here to check it out.)

As you can see, the rate of return on this specific trade is 66.67%.

P A G E 1 2 T H E A C E C A R D T H E F E T C H

Now, here's where the Ace Card comes in.

Most options traders pay a fee for EVERY contract.

This can add up BIG-TIME.

Surprisingly, many traders still don't know the Robinhood app allows for FREE (as in, no fees) options trading.

UNLIMITED.

Before each trade would cut into your profits... now, it's free as a bird.

Check out Robinhood right here.

P A G E 1 3 C O L L E C T A N D R E P E A T T H E F E T C H

The best part about this strategy is you can do it over and over and over...

And maintain an "unfair advantage" over most options traders each and every day.

There it is.

Again, this is just a primer to credit spreads.

Just to get your feet wet.

If you want to learn more, here are some worthy (and easy to follow) videos to walk you through how this can be an incredible income strategy:

Video: Bull Put Credit Spread

Video: Bear Call Credit Spread

Video: Credit Spreads on RobinHood for Beginners

P A G E 1 4 S U M M A R Y T H E F E T C H

SUMMARY:

There are three ways to make money when selling a put:

1] When the stock goes sideways 2] When the stock goes up. 3] AND, once you sell this put on the market, you get an instant credit to your account.

The "bull put spread" is when you simultaneously sell a put and buy another put at a lower strike price (same expiration cycle).

The "bear call spread" is when you simultaneously sell a call and buy a call at a higher strike price (same expiration cycle).

Calculate your trades and your odds with the "Credit Spread Calculator." (Click here to check it out.)

Robinhood offers free (as in, no fees) trades on bear and bull credit spreads.

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