Options As A Strategic Investment Fifth Edition Pdf May 2026
The rain was doing that peculiar New York thing where it fell straight down, as if even the wind was too tired to push it sideways. Arthur leaned against the cold glass of the subway window, watching his reflection blur. At thirty-four, he was a senior data analyst at a mid-sized logistics firm. The title was a lie. He was a spreadsheet janitor, mopping up other people’s forecasting errors.
That night, he opened to Chapter One. The prose was not sexy. It was precise, surgical, almost angry in its insistence on discipline. "Most people think options are risky," McMillan wrote. "They are wrong. Ignorance is risky. Options are merely leveraged opinions." Options As A Strategic Investment Fifth Edition Pdf
Over the next six months, Arthur became a quiet machine. He stopped checking his phone every ten minutes. He traded defined-risk strategies: iron condors for earnings, calendar spreads for slow drift, ratio backspreads when he smelled a breakout. He lost four trades in a row once—a gut-punch that McMillan had warned about. "The market will do what it wants," the book said. "Your job is to survive." The rain was doing that peculiar New York
He bought it for $4.50, the cashier not even looking up from her phone. The title was a lie
The real shift came in October. A rumor hit that $CHIP was a takeover target. The stock gapped up $20 overnight. Arthur had a position: a long call diagonal. His short call was blown away. His long call was suddenly deep in the money. He did not panic. He followed the McMillan flowchart: roll the short call up and out, capture the remaining extrinsic value, let the long run.
For three weeks, he studied. He filled legal pads with Greek letters: Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega. He learned that Theta was time decay—the silent killer of the option buyer, the quiet ally of the seller. He learned that IV (implied volatility) was just the market’s collective anxiety disorder, quantified.