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Call/Put Options Ratio
By dividing the weekly volume of all call options by
the weekly volume of all put options is how the indicator is calculated.
The fact that the majority of options traders are frequently wrong near
critical turning points is a concept on which this indicator is based
on. As an example, we often find big call volumes near market tops and
big put volumes near market bottoms. Low readings of this oscillator are
considered bulling; high readings are bearish.
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Information Corner:
Market Timing - We trade options based on market timing principles.
This means we analyze past trends in options volume and options cash
volume in order to generate an accurate forecast of the probable future
market trends...
Options Basics - Purchasing an
option gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a
specific amount of an underlying security at a specific price within a specified
time period...
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