Jun 9, 2021
Imran Lakha (How to use option strategies to improve your market edge)
* 00:00:38 How Imran found his way from Wall Street to teaching option strategies at Options Insight.
* 00:09:42 What retail traders should learn before trading options. Why meme stocks options are such a 'rational choice' right now?
* 00:14:42 Where are the best opportunities for trading options to still have an edge?
* 00:24:45 What is Imran's view on the delation/inflation scenario? Are commodities a good hedge?
* 00:29:35 Why does a 'rational investor' buy negative yielding bonds (or very low yielding bonds) at all considering the inflation risk?
* 00:36:35 Did Softbank successfully manipulate the stock market for mid-tier tech stocks in 2020?
* 00:43:19 Is there a 'low risk' strategy to buy/sell volatility?
* 00:48:56 What are excellent, low risk hedging strategies for a portfolio? Can a option based 'hedge' actually make money?
* 01:03:15 What is the strong relationship between low interest rates and money losing tech companies?
* 01:08:10 Is there are place for 'value investors' left? Why does the investment world basically just 'bet on more free money' instead?
* 01:13:14 What is Imran's strategy to use options trading Bitcoin upside/ downside?
You may watch this episode on Youtube - #95 Imran Lakha (How to use option strategies to improve your market edge).
Imran Lakha has been working with Citibank, Bank of America and Credit Suisse trading options. He now teaches options strategies at Options Insight.
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Torsten Jacobi: Yeah, we love to have you on and we know your specialty is option trading. And do we also know you've been all old, all street, different banks, credit, Swiss, city bank over the years, and you've been doing this for a long time. And I was curious, what attracted you to the financial industry in the first place? And then why did you leave Wall Street at some point?
Imran Lakha: Okay, so in terms of what attracted me to Wall Street, I guess, you know, I did mathematics and economics at university. I was the son of an accountant. So my dad was in finance, both my brothers were kind of in finance as well. And so because I was always pretty decent at maps and had those quantitative skills, it was like, what career can I go into and utilize the skills that I have? And, you know, going to London School of Economics set me up to be able to, you know, be attracted by those big banks on Wall Street where, you know, as a 20, 30 year old, you can you can make good money and, you know, you can get some decent security and live a good life, right? That was the kind of goal when I originally started. I was brought up to be very motivated to get myself secure and comfortable in life, right? So, you know, my dad struggled, you know, he moved here. When he was 20 years old, he struggled through various jobs that he would, he was quite skilled, like in terms of knowledge and stuff, but he had to do jobs that were kind of, you know, maybe a little bit basic for him. And he didn't want us to go through the same strife, right? So he, he kind of taught us that, you know, work hard at school, get the skills, get a good job and make set yourself up, basically, right? So it's very Asian, very Asian mentality. But it kind of worked, right? It was, it was certainly worked on a materialistic level, like allowing me to earn enough money to get myself comfortable, you know?
Torsten Jacobi: Yeah. Why did you end up, and I know you changed positions for different banks over the years, but I know you took a break a couple of years ago, and then you left Wall Street once out.
Imran Lakha: So actually, you know, a lot of that initially was driven by my wife. Yeah. So she, she was really keen on traveling before we had kids. So we were married for about, you know, seven years. We weren't in a rush to have kids, but we were like, you know, if we're going to have kids, she really, really wanted to see the world a bit and travel. And because my career was going pretty well, you know, I hadn't really taken the plunge until then. And, and it just came to a nice point in my career where I was feeling pretty burnt out. I've been doing it for about 10 years. And she really wanted to travel before we had kids. So I was like, you know what, I'm going to put my hand up, take voluntary redundancy, and let's use the money I get to travel the world. So that's what we did before we had kids. It's amazing.
Torsten Jacobi: Yeah, it sounds a bit like Jim Rogers, right? He, he took his money, he went on this two year long trip, you know, I think he did two trips around the world, both of them were around two years old. And then he ran his own shop after that, right? So he, he joined the ranks of the legendary investors who run their own shop, the company, the publisher, publishing newsletter, we know this is something that is as a business model, really, really popular right now, the stack exchange. Is that something that you, where you felt like, well, I can either make more money, or this is just fits my lifestyle better? How did you, how did you transition this way out of Wall Street at that point?
Imran Lakha: Well, my, my actual transition out of Wall Street happened later. So when I came back from traveling, I wasn't desperate to go back to banking. I was, I was kind of fishing around to see if there were any hedge fund opportunities, didn't manage to find any, and then ended up joining an old boss of mine at Citibank, and actually got back to banking, which was slightly annoying, because I was kind of enjoying not being in it. But it was only later after I had kind of, you know, had my little go on the buy side, you know, satisfied that sort of itch, scratch that itch as it were. And then it was only then that I was okay, now it's time to maybe try something else. And that was the teaching, because I'd always quite enjoyed the idea of teaching and I'd always in, you know, throughout my career at banks, I'd always trained people that came through, and, and that was something that I really liked to do. And I found that I was quite effective at it. So then I was like, okay, so I've got a bunch of knowledge on a subject that's quite niche, and I've got a lot, I've got a big network of contacts that I could probably, you know, turn into clients, you know, ex colleagues or whatever that I might have. So why not give it a go? So that was the night when I created Options Insight.
Torsten Jacobi: And Options Insight help us to understand that a little better. It's really about trading options in the market, what's available to the retail investor, or does it go in a different direction?
Imran Lakha: No, well, when I first started Options Insight, it was about how, how do I leverage my network, right? So I've got a bunch of old colleagues at banks, some of them are asset managers who are old clients of mine. I've got some brokers who I used to be their clients, all these people who have, I've probably have staff, junior staff who need proper training, and probably don't get proper training, right? So it was actually at the start, it was more of an institutional product and an institutional offering that I was giving, because that was the contacts that I already had, right? And no one, no one in the public sphere, no one in retail knew me, right? So, so it was very much the first couple of years, just leveraging those contacts, building up my content, bu…