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In the Money vs. At the Money Options: An Example

In the money vs. at the money options In the money options are options which have positive intrinsic value. This means that at the moment of expiration (when no time ...  See more

Measuring Directional Exposure with Delta: Single Option and Option Spreads

Delta as a measure of directional exposure The relationship between the underlying stock’s price changes and the option’s price changes is measured by the well known Greek letter delta. In ...  See more

4 Benefits of Alternative Investments as Part of Your Portfolio

Benefits of alternative investments Alternative investments represent an aggregate of hedge funds, private equity, real estate, commodities, managed futures, and a growing number of other types of (often exotic and ...  See more

7 Common Characteristics of Alternative Investments

Common features of alternative investments Besides being increasingly popular in the last decades, alternative investments have proved to have significant benefits for long-term portfolios of various types of investors. Nevertheless, ...  See more

Alternative Investments Accessibility: Are Hedge Funds Only for the Rich?

Alternative assets are not available to everybody Alternative investments are very diverse. You can choose from various styles of hedge funds, private equity funds, real estate, commodity investing vehicles, or ...  See more

Non-Normal Return Distribution of Alternative Investments

Non-normal returns of alternative investments and skewness Non-normal return distribution is one of the most common features of alternative investments. With alternative investments we mainly look at skewness of the ...  See more

How to Calculate True Range (Including Visual Examples)

How True Range is different from other indicators The concept of True Range and calculation of ATR (Average True Range) is confusing for many people, as you are actually comparing ...  See more

The Difference between Range and True Range

Using Range for measuring volatility The easiest way to quickly measure market’s volatility during a particular trading day or week is by calculating the Range. Price Range is simply the ...  See more

RSI Overbought and Oversold Areas

RSI is an oscillator – it’s purpose it to make things simple RSI (Relative Strength Index) is one of the most widely used oscillators. Oscillators are indicators calculated from price ...  See more

How to Calculate RSI (Relative Strength Index)

This article is a detailed guide how to calculate the Relative Strength Index (RSI). RSI formula RSI = 100 – 100 / ( 1 + RS ) RS = Relative ...  See more